I would imagine Hydrogen Bond. It is hydrogen bond because hydrogen fluoride and water have a large dipole. The electronegative atom attracts electrons away from the hydrogen atom leaving the hydrogen atom almost unshielded proton with a partial positive charge.
Hydrogen bonding, London forces, and dipole-dipole forces
Hydrogen bonding, as that is the strongest intermolecular force.
Hydrogen bonds give water its properties.
Hydrogen bond is present in hydrogen fluoride as well as London dispersion forces but hydrogen bond is stronger than London dispersion.
Hydrogen bond is present in hydrogen fluoride as well as London forces but they are not as significant as hydrogen bond.
hydrogen bonding.
H-F...H-F...H-F...
Hydrogen bonding, dipole, and dispersion forces.
hydrogen bond
eletromagnetic force
london dispersion
Hydrogen bonds can be considered as the strongest intermolecular attraction forces.
hydrogen
Hydrogen bonding, which is the strongest of the intermolecular forces.
Not particlarly it is weaker than the electrostaic attraction between ions but is the strongest of the intermolecular forces.
the strongest intermolecular force is Hydrogen, but between H and Cl, I think it is Permanent dipole.
eletromagnetic force
london dispersion
hydrogen bond
hydrogen bonding
london dispersion and dipole-dipole is the strongest in this molecule.
Hydrogen bonding.
Hydrogen bonds can be considered as the strongest intermolecular attraction forces.
hydrogen
Hydrogen bonds can be considered as the strongest intermolecular attraction forces.
hydrogen bonding
Hydrogen bonding, which is the strongest of the intermolecular forces.