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The molecules haves secondary types of bondings as 1- Dipole-Dipole interaction, 2- Vander waal's bonding and 3- Hydrogen bonding, depending upon nature of molecules.
No, hydrogen bondng only occurs in molecules where hydrogen (H) bonds with nitrogen (N), Oxygen (O) or fluorine (F)
Hydrogen Bonds
Covalent bonding occurs between the nucelotides between the phosphate, deoxyribose sugar and organic base of a single DNA strand and hydrogen bonding holds the complementary bases of two DNA strands together.
the hydrogen bond.
The molecules haves secondary types of bondings as 1- Dipole-Dipole interaction, 2- Vander waal's bonding and 3- Hydrogen bonding, depending upon nature of molecules.
the hydrogen bonding is possible in oxygen, nitrogen,and fluorine
Hydrogen bonding between molecules occurs between water molecules. These are types of dipole-dipole interactions. Hydrogen bonds between hydrogens eg H2 are covalent as are the bonds between hydrogen and carbon atoms. Hydrogens have a mid range electronegativity so they tend to form covalent bonding.
You don't. A triple bond occurs between two atoms that each have either three or four bonding sites. Nitrogen molecules and acetylene molecules have triple bonds. Hydrogen atoms have one bonding site.
No, hydrogen bondng only occurs in molecules where hydrogen (H) bonds with nitrogen (N), Oxygen (O) or fluorine (F)
Hydrogen Bonds
hydrogen bonds
covalent
Covalent bonding occurs between the nucelotides between the phosphate, deoxyribose sugar and organic base of a single DNA strand and hydrogen bonding holds the complementary bases of two DNA strands together.
Hydrogen bonding usually occurs between molecules that have a hydrogen atom bonded to either Fluorine, Oxygen or Nitrogen. So technically CH4 cannot hydrogen bond (certainly not between it's own molecules). However a recent A-Level exam paper had a multiple choice question which said that CH4 molecules CAN hydrogen bond with itself.
hydrogen bound
the hydrogen bond.