Selenium fluoride bond is polar because fluorine is more electro-negative than selenium. Hence the shared paired of electrons are more towards fluorine giving fluorine a partial negative charge and selenium a partial positive charge.
No. Since all the bond polarity is in opposite directions, they cancel each other out.
Yes, the molecule has polar bonds due to difference in electronegativity between selenium and fluoride and that the molecular shape is bent.
iron, zinc, iodine, copper, manganese, fluoride, chromium, selenium, molybdenum, and boron
as far as I remember, it is 0. Sulphur is +6, and each fluoride is -1
HF has a polar covalent bond.
water dissolves ALL ionic and ALL polar compound's;examples of each are;Polar compound's,ethanol, ammonia, Hydrogen Fluoride, sulphur dioxide, acetoneIonic compounds,sodium chloridepotassium chloridelithium chloriderubidium chloridecesium chloride
Jons Jacob was the man to discover Selenium.
Ammonium Fluoride is polar.
Yes...hydrogen fluoride (HF) has polar covalent bonds
Yes, hydrogen fluoride is very polar.
No, it is very polar.
nonpolar
Fluoride, selenium, sodium, iodine, copper and zinc are not macronutrients
Please see http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Which_is_more_polar_fluorene_or_florenone
AnswerYes, ZnF2 is polar and CH3OH is polar. Like dissolves like.
The common name is selenium fluoride. In this molecule, the Se atom is in +2 oxidation state. Therefore the corresponding IUPAC name is Selenium(II) Chloride.
BeF2 is non-polar as it is (strangely) covalent in nature and as such, the molecule has a linear shape which produces a non-polar molecule.
iron, zinc, iodine, copper, manganese, fluoride, chromium, selenium, molybdenum, and boron
Non of both, potassium fluoride, KF, is ionic