actually a bipolar molecule(dipole) in isolation doesn't have any charge.But when it comes near a electropositive or electronegative element/ion it develops pseudo negative charge(for electropositive ion) or pseudo positive charge(for electronegative ion).
A molecule hasn't an electrical charge. An ion has a positive charge (cation) or a negative charge (anion).
there has to be a negative charge in the molecule as there is a positive charge. there is a negative charge and when it and a positive charge gets together it forms something that makes the charge neutral
It makes the molecule polar
no this is a diatomic molecule and therefore does not have a charge.
It makes the molecule polar
Nope
A molecule hasn't an electrical charge. An ion has a positive charge (cation) or a negative charge (anion).
No, h2 does not have a net charge. It is a neutral molecule.
It's not an ionic compound.
No. Molecules do not have charge. Ions have a charge. If a compound is has more than one atom and a charge, then it is a poly-atomic ion, not a molecule.
-1 charge
there has to be a negative charge in the molecule as there is a positive charge. there is a negative charge and when it and a positive charge gets together it forms something that makes the charge neutral
No. The oxidation number is the charge on the atom of an element, or if the bonding is covalent, what that charge would be if that bonding were ionic. A "molecule" with an electrical charge would be a polyatomic ion, not a molecule.
according to the "Like dissolves like" in solubility, ionic compounds like salt, the polar materials, can be dissolved in similar polar nature water molecule.
This is a polar molecule.
An ion.
yes it is