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Covalent bonds generally hold polymers together.
Hydrogen bonds (two between adenine and thymine, and three between guanine and cytosine).
Peptide bonds hold adjacent amino acids together. Peptide bonds are covalent. But the bonds that dictate the secondary, tertiary, and Quaternary structure of the resulting protein are generally hydrogen bonds, van der Walls interations, and hydrophobic interactions.
In producing a strand of DNA the nucleotides combine to form phosphodiester bonds.
The nitrogen bases are held together by hydrogen bonds.
ionic bonds hold the particles together in NaCl.
Covalent bonds
Ionic bonds
The three types of chemical bonds that hold the atoms within a compound together are Ionic bonds, Covalent bonds, and Polar covalent bonds.
hydrogen bonds
to my knowledge, Ionic bonds hold them together, hope this helps :)
Covalent bonds generally hold polymers together.
Hydrogen bonds
Covalent bonds, in which atoms share valence electrons, and ionic bonds, in which electrons are transferred from one atom to another, are the types of bonds that hold atoms together.
quite simply, bonds. The strength of these bonds depends on the type of element or compound that forms the solid. These 'particles' you refer to are best known as 'atoms' and the atoms that form a solid are held together by these bonds.
Peptide Bonds are bonds that keep amino acids togetherHydrogen Bonds are bonds that keep proteins together and give them their 3-D form
hydrogen bonds