This is actually a rather vague question. Bonds remain the same unless the temperature is high enough to break them. The physical state of a covalent bond is one of unequally shared electrons, that's pretty much it. In a carbon dioxide molecule, for example, the shared valence electrons spend more time with the oxygen nuclei than with the carbon nucleus.
the usual state of a covalent compound at room temperature is a liquid.
liquids and gasesare the usual states for a covalent bond at room temperature.
The type of bond in which two atoms share electrons is called a covalent bond.
Yes, a peptide bond is a covalent bond.
A covalent bond is formed.
A covalent bond is one in which atoms within a molecule share pairs of electrons (hence the term covalent or "mutual electron state"). It is not clear to me what is meant by "molecular" in your question, but the bond is intramolecular(or inside the molecule). A covalent bond is a type of molecular bond, if that is the question.
liquids and gasesare the usual states for a covalent bond at room temperature.
The type of bond in which two atoms share electrons is called a covalent bond.
Yes, a peptide bond is a covalent bond.
A covalent bond is formed.
covalent bond,coordinate bond and singlet bond
A covalent bond is one in which atoms within a molecule share pairs of electrons (hence the term covalent or "mutual electron state"). It is not clear to me what is meant by "molecular" in your question, but the bond is intramolecular(or inside the molecule). A covalent bond is a type of molecular bond, if that is the question.
Covalent Bond .
covalent
covalent
nonpolar covalent bond
Hydrogen chloride has a covalent bond.
When atoms share electrons, they form a chemical bond, or covalent bond.