Lithium fluoride is ionic-- however Li is small and very polarising- but F is very electronegative. So ionic with a touch of covalency would be a reasonable answer.
It is polar because it is ionic.
yes
Ionic
Cl4 does not exist, but if CCl4 is meant: this is a nonpolar compound
Linoleic acid is considered a type of nonpolar compound. It contains a hydrocarbon due to being a fatty acid making it nonpolar.
pentane is nonpolar covalent compound
Polar (C 6 H 12 O 6)
Honey is Polar and nonpolar
Cl4 does not exist, but if CCl4 is meant: this is a nonpolar compound
Polar compound.
no... water is a polar compound
Linoleic acid is considered a type of nonpolar compound. It contains a hydrocarbon due to being a fatty acid making it nonpolar.
It is a polar compound (a protein-digesting enzyme).
pentane is nonpolar covalent compound
A) nonpolar compounds will not dissolve in water because water is polar
Glycerin is not a polar compound. It is considered a nonpolar compound because it lacks the ability to produce dipole moments.
Nonpolar compounds do not have dipole moments. Dipole moments are polar forces. If the compound is nonpolar then there is no polarity within that molecule.
It is a nonpolar compound because their electronegativity differences are not big and therefore rendering them nonpolar.
Potassium permanganate is a polar compound. This is a salt that has an ionic formula and being polar refers to the type of molecules that are in a compound.
Polar (C 6 H 12 O 6)