Want this question answered?
It is not a hydrogen bond if they are in same molecule.But H bond forms between them.
Single covalent bond :)
The question makes no sense. There's no such thing as a "nitrogen bond". If you mean "nitrogen atoms", then there are no hydrogen bonds between nitrogen atoms. If you mean "hydrogen bonds between a hydrogen and a nitrogen", then they break like any other hydrogen bond; they aren't really "bonds", just relatively strong electrostatic forces.
The hydrogen bond is a bond between two electronegative atoms, specifically oxygen or nitrogen. Thus to hydrogen bond, an electronegative atom is connected.
Hydrogen bonding holds together the two strands of a double stranded DNA. Hydrogen bonding exists between the nitrogen base pairs.
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
It is not a hydrogen bond if they are in same molecule.But H bond forms between them.
Hydrogen bond
hydrogen bond
Single covalent bond :)
The question makes no sense. There's no such thing as a "nitrogen bond". If you mean "nitrogen atoms", then there are no hydrogen bonds between nitrogen atoms. If you mean "hydrogen bonds between a hydrogen and a nitrogen", then they break like any other hydrogen bond; they aren't really "bonds", just relatively strong electrostatic forces.
The hydrogen bond is a bond between two electronegative atoms, specifically oxygen or nitrogen. Thus to hydrogen bond, an electronegative atom is connected.
Hydrogen
A "hydrogen bond" - a intermolecular force caused by large difference in electronegativity. [Hydrogen has a very low electronegativity whilst Fluorine, Oxygen and Nitrogen all have a very high electronegativity so an electrostatic attraction exists]
As long as the hydrogen is attached to Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen the bonding will be a hydrogen bond.
Hydrogen bonding holds together the two strands of a double stranded DNA. Hydrogen bonding exists between the nitrogen base pairs.
Nitrogen, Oxygen and Fluorine