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the element that fluorine bonds with are nitrogen, oxygen, and many more
Covalent bond
Carbon to fluorine.
Nonpolar covalent.
covalent
Nitrogen and fluorine are both nonmetals so that makes the bond a covalent bond. It's not hard.
Covalent bond
A hydrogen bond is a type of chemical bond. A hydrogen atom bonds with either a nitrogen, fluorine, or oxygen atom to make a weak bond.
the element that fluorine bonds with are nitrogen, oxygen, and many more
A hydrogen bond is the strongest type of intermolecular forces. It occurs whenever there is a bond between hydrogen and either fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen.
Fluorine seems a likely answer
Covalent bond
Carbon to fluorine.
This bond is covalent.
Nitrogen (N2) is less reactive than fluorine (F2) because the triple bond in diatomic nitrogen requires much more energy to break than the single bond in diatomic fluorine. This means that there is a much greater energy requirement to dissociate two nitrogen atoms from each other than two fluorine atoms, making nitrogen far less reactive than fluorine.
Nonpolar covalent.
fluorine and silicon form a perdominately ionic bond. fluorine is a nonmetal and silicon is a metal.