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Covalent bonds are held together by electrostatic (+/-) attractions between the nucleus of one atom and electrons from another atom and vice versa and there is also a quantum mechanical effect of delocalisation.
Strong attractions of electrostatic forces between shared electrons and the positively charged nucleusCovalent bond is formed by the mutual sharing of electrons and has covalent force of attraction between them
they will bond together with a double covalent bond
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Covalent bonds are held together by electrostatic (+/-) attractions between the nucleus of one atom and electrons from another atom and vice versa and there is also a quantum mechanical effect of delocalisation.
they will bond together with a double covalent bond
Strong attractions of electrostatic forces between shared electrons and the positively charged nucleusCovalent bond is formed by the mutual sharing of electrons and has covalent force of attraction between them
A covalent bond is held together by the attractions between the protons in the nucleus and shared electrons.
a good personality and financial stability
Hydrogen bonds are electrostatic attractions between a hydrogen atom, bonded to a more electronegative atom of one molecule AND a more electronegative atom of another molecule, but there is no sharing of electrons. In covalent bonding, atoms share electrons to form molecules.
Covalent bonds hold the atoms together in a water molecule. In covalent bonds atoms share electrons.
The bond in water is covalent.
They bond together by each atom sharing 3 electrons and forming a triple covalent bond.
No.
Each atom in a covalent bond shares at least one electron with another electron of another atom to maintain the covalent bond.