Shorter bond lengths. N2 is very strong with its triple bond.
C-H bond is stronger
I think of it this way: the more bonds an atom has, the stronger it can hold onto the other atom, and therefore it's able to pull it in real tight - making it short and strong both! :) Here's what my chem book says: ---- * A single bond has a bond order of 1. * a double bond has a bond order of 2. * A triple bond has a bond order of 3. In a given pair of atoms, a higher bond order results in a shorter bond lengthand a higher bond energy. A shorter bond is a stronger bond. *Information from Chapter 9 in Silberberg's CHEMISTRY: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change. 4 Ed. pp 341 - 342.
A disulphide bond is covalent.
In almost all cases, ionic bonds are stronger than covalent bonds. Although there are exceptions such as diamond and graphite.
As a generalization, ionic bonds are much stronger than covalent bonds.
because it takes more energy to break a triple bond than a double bondActually we know that in triple bonding one bond is sigma and other two bonds are pi covalent bonds and sigma bond is more stronger than the pi bonds and as the bond order increases the length shorten and the sigma bond become mora stronger which add to other two pi bonds hence tripple bond is more stronger than double bond.because there is three times the dond
The shorter the length the stronger the bond.
The bond length of two atoms is the distance between the centers/ nuclei of the atoms involved in the bond. In order to break any bond, energy of a certain value has to be supplied. this means that the closer the nuclei of the bonding atoms are, a greater supply of energy is needed to separate the atoms. in other words, 'short' bond lengths require high dissociation energies to break the bond.
because when there is a double bond, there is a Pi bond involved. and Pi bonds are weaker than sigma bonds (which are in single bonds) WRONG. While it is true that Pi bonds are weaker than Sigma bonds, double bonds (C = C) contain BOTH Pi and Sigma bonds making double bonds stronger than single bonds (which contain only a Sigma bond) overall.
No, hydrogen bonds are weak in comparison to both ionic and covalent bonds.
C-H bond is stronger
I think of it this way: the more bonds an atom has, the stronger it can hold onto the other atom, and therefore it's able to pull it in real tight - making it short and strong both! :) Here's what my chem book says: ---- * A single bond has a bond order of 1. * a double bond has a bond order of 2. * A triple bond has a bond order of 3. In a given pair of atoms, a higher bond order results in a shorter bond lengthand a higher bond energy. A shorter bond is a stronger bond. *Information from Chapter 9 in Silberberg's CHEMISTRY: The Molecular Nature of Matter and Change. 4 Ed. pp 341 - 342.
The ionic bond is stronger.
The strongest chemical bond is the ionic bond. Ionic bond strengths are greater than covalent bond strengths.answer 2it is known that covalent bond is stronger.
Coordinate covalent bonds are neither stronger nor weaker than regular covalent bonds. They behave just the same way.
No. Ionic bonds are typically stronger. it is because ionic bond has more intermolecular force of attraction.
bonds get bigger with the more energy