For S to make a covalent bond, it would be best to bind it to another non metal. Once such element would be H, thus making the S-H bond which is covalent. Another example would be to bind it to another S, making the disulfide bond, S-S which is also covalent.
Yes. Sulfur (S) and hydrogen (H) will form a polar covalent bond.
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HCl has an ionic bond.
An S atom has the weakest attraction for the electrons in a bond with an H atom.
No. O-H bond energy is larger
The bond between sulfur and hydrogen is polar covalent. By convention, this bond is not polar enough to involve in hydrogen bonding.
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O-H - C-H H-Cl The only covalent bond hydrogen can make is a single sigma bond with it's one electron.
H2S has covalent bond between H and S.
As fluorine, oxygen and nitrogen do, the bond polarity in a -H-Cl bond is not adequate to form hydrogen bonds.
P-S , H-F, P-Cl