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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.

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14y ago
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14y ago

the usual state of a covalent compound at room temperature is a liquid.

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Q: What is the physical state of a covalent bond at room temperature?
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