A polar molecule. The charges are signified using δ± (delta meaning a difference or change, lowercase meaning it is a small difference, the ± denoting whether that end is positive or negative).
If the same molecule contains both positively and negatively charged groups, it's called a zwitterion.
A molecule having both slightly negative and positive ends is a polar molecule.
A polar molecule formed by a covalent bond between two dissimilar non metals results in increased density of electrons i.e. towards the higher electronegative atom, resulting in formation of ngative pole. The other atom becomes positive pole. Such molecules are called dipolar. Eg. HCl
A polar covalent molecule. Water is a good example of this type of molecule.
There are many such molecules, one such is water, with two hydrogens distributed at the positive end and one oxygen at the negative end.
i think polar molecule!!
HOH
Also known as Water.
A polar molecule
A polar molecule.
inertransition
Since water is a slightly polar molecule (the hydrogen end being slightly positive and the oxygen ends being slightly negative) the positively charged sodium ion (Na+) will be attracted to the oxygen end of the water molecule.
Slightly negative. The oxygen end of the water molecule is slightly negative because of oxygen's greater electronegativity. The two electrons of the hydrogens in covalent bonding spend more of their time in oxygen's valance shell.
Molecules that have partially positive and negative regions are called polar molecules. Polarity results from an unequal attraction of electrons between the atoms that make up a molecule. The electrons are more drawn towards atoms with a higher electronegativity, thus making these atoms partially negative.
Because in an unbalanced system, the positive end a positive charge, and the negaticve end has a negative charge. Though current (which is reletive to the "positiveness" of an area) flows from positive to negative, electrons flow from negative to positive.
It can mean high surface tension. Hydrogen bonding occurs in water because each water molecule contains 2 hydrogen atoms, and that constitutes the positive end of that molecule with no electron present (other than the one tied up in the covalent bond with oxygen.) The oxygen end of the molecule is negative (because of unshared electrons.) The attaction between the positive end of one water molecule to the negative end of another is hydrogen bonding, and it explains many of water's properties, including surface tension, how water expands when it freezes, and even why snowflakes are 6-sided.
one end of the molecule has a slightly negative charge and the other a slightly positive charge.
The slightly negative end of one polar molecule will be attracted to the slightly positive, hydrogen end of another molecule.
water - having a slightly negative charge on the oxygen end and a slightly positive charge on the Hydrogen end.
A molecule that has a negative and positive end is a polar molecule.
All polar molecules have a slightly positive charge at one end and a slightly negative charge at the other. In fact, it is the definition of a polar molecule.
Polaric molecule
Water molecules are slightly positive on the hydrogen end (the mickey ears) and slightly negative on the oxygen end (the mickey head).
Since water is a slightly polar molecule (the hydrogen end being slightly positive and the oxygen ends being slightly negative) the positively charged sodium ion (Na+) will be attracted to the oxygen end of the water molecule.
Polar. Even though a water molecule has no overall charge, it has a slightly negative end and a slightly positive end.
H2o
A zwitterion, if you mean formal charges. If you just mean relatively positive and negative, then a polar molecule.
Polaric molecule