ionic
Hydrogen bonds can be considered as the strongest intermolecular attraction forces.
The ionic bond is the strongest followed by covalent, metallic, Van der Waals.
Ionic bonds
Ionic bonds are the strongest bonds
Magnesium has the strongest bonds among lithium, magnesium, and aluminum. This is because magnesium has more electrons available for metallic bonding compared to lithium and aluminum, leading to stronger metallic bonds.
Depends on which 3 bonds you mean.
The answer is no. If you are comparing them with covalent or metallic bonds, then covalent is the strongest in general. There are, obviously, exceptions, but in general ionic bonds are easier to break than covalent bonds.
I don't know if these are the bonds listed in your question, but here is an orderCovalent - ionic - hydrogen(covalent bonds are the strongest, and hydrogen bonds are the weakest bonds)
No. Ionic bonds are considerably more easily broken than covalent bonds.
Covalent bonds tend to form the strongest bonds because the atoms involved share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration. This sharing of electrons results in a strong bond that holds the atoms together tightly.
Covalent bonds, particularly those found in diamond and graphene, are among the strongest chemical bonds due to the sharing of electrons between atoms. Ionic bonds, where electrons are transferred between atoms, can also be strong, such as in the case of sodium chloride. Hydrogen bonds are relatively weaker than covalent and ionic bonds.
convalent bonds have the greatet bond energy.