Hydrogen bonds
There are no hydrogen bonds in HF.
Polar.
Yes...hydrogen fluoride (HF) has polar covalent bonds
Hydrogen bonds
I think it's because HF forms hydrogen bonds, that are stronger than other Van der Waals's forces - other molecules form weaker molecular bonds.
There are no hydrogen bonds in HF.
HF molecules form hydrogen bonds.
Polar.
HF and CN- have covalent bonds.
It is considered that hydrogen fluoride has covalent bonds.
Yes...hydrogen fluoride (HF) has polar covalent bonds
HCN
Hydrogen bonds
I think it's because HF forms hydrogen bonds, that are stronger than other Van der Waals's forces - other molecules form weaker molecular bonds.
Hydrogen fluoride, with the chemical formula HF, is a colorless gas that is the principal source of fluorine. The type of intermolecular forces that exist in HF are London forces, dipole-dipole.
Both H2O and HF possess H bonds as their intermolecular force but H bonds of HF are stronger than that of H2o. therefore boiling point of than that of H2O. But experimental boiling point is high in H2O than that of Hf
The HF molecule is covalent. All C-F bonds are covalent.Whilst carbon and hydrogen are both about 2.5 in electronegativity, and fluorine, the most electronegative atom on the periodic table, is about 4 , the proton that would be created if the HF bond were ionic would be too intensely polarising for the ionic bond to persist. The same argument can beused to rationalise why CF4 is not C4+ (F-)4. The HF and CF bonds are both polar.