covalent bonding
covalent bonding
Methane is a molecule with covalent bonds. Then again, there are different types of bonds. To be specific, Methane is a tetrahedral molecule with covalent long single bonds.
The bond line formula for methane is CH4.
I have never heard of methanic gas. If you mean methane, it is covalent, sp3 hybridised from each bond of the carbon bonding with the 1s orbital of each hydrogen
yes, methane is CH4
No, the bond between carbon and hydrogen in methane (CH₄) is a covalent bond, not a hydrogen bond. A hydrogen bond is a type of intermolecular force that occurs between a hydrogen atom bonded to a highly electronegative atom (like oxygen or nitrogen) and a neighboring electronegative atom.
Covalent bond.
A covalent bond typically involves two or more nonmetals. In covalent bonding, atoms share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration. This type of bond is common in molecules such as water (H2O) and methane (CH4).
Covalent bonds are the intramolecular forces that hold the hydrogens to the carbon in methane, CH4. The intermolecular forces holding several methane molecules together are London dispersion forces (van der Waals forces).
Methane CH4
its a sp3 hybridisation
covalent bonding