covalent bonds
molecular
yes it can
Based off my chemistry class, for bonds to be ionic it must be a bonding of a metal and a non-metal. Since chlorine and carbon are both non metals they can't be ionic, we would call it covalent bond but molecular compound works as well.
How can you compare covalent bonding and ionic bonding with soccer
Covalent Molecular Bonding
covalent bonds
molecular
The answer is bonding orbital.
yes it can
AlP is a solid and it is not molecular. The difference in electronegativity is only 0.58. The bonding is It is best described as polar covalent . There are many compounds that are not molecular but are covalent giant molecules.
With itself. Molecular bonding theory and the bond order show a sigma pi discrepancy ( bonding/anti-bonding ) that disallows this tetra-covalent carbon to carbon interaction. Google this for a fuller explanation.
Based off my chemistry class, for bonds to be ionic it must be a bonding of a metal and a non-metal. Since chlorine and carbon are both non metals they can't be ionic, we would call it covalent bond but molecular compound works as well.
Methanol, CH3OH (CH4O) is a covalent molecular compound. It is liquid under normal conditions and there is hydrogen bonding between molecules
no, it's a molecular orbit that can be occupied by two electrons of a covalent bond(:
Intermolecular is the bonding between the molecules (what connects them all together) For example dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding (HFON)Intramolecular is the bonding between the atoms like ionic covalent or metallic.For example in a water molecule the intermolecular bonding would be the hydrogen bonding. The non-bonding pairs will connect with other water molecules non-bonding pairs to create a hydrogen bond. Whereas the intramolecular bonding would be covalent. Because that's what joins the individual hydrogen atoms to one oxygen atom.
How can you compare covalent bonding and ionic bonding with soccer