Oxygen can bond with many compounds including itself (O3-ozone) it is very reactive; other compounds are:
CO2- Carbon Doixide
H2O- Water
N2O- Nitrous Oxide (laughing gas)
H2SO4- Hydrogen Sulfate
SiO2- Silicon Dioxide (quartz)
Oxygen will bond with all elements except Helium and Neon. It isn't crazy about the rest of the Noble Gases: Argon, Kryton, Xenon, and Radon but can be made to bond with them at high temperatures and pressure.
Oxygen has the greater bond energy.
A covalent bond
Covalent bond
A double nonpolar covalent bond in the common kind with formula O2.
The single bond length between oxygen and phosphorus is 176 picometers but I am unsure of the double bond length.
The bond is covalent.
In an oxygen molecule, the two oxygen atoms are connected with a covalent bond.
The oxygen in the air is O2 and it has a covalent bond.
covalent bond
No. Hydrogen and oxygen bond covalently.
For a molecule of oxygen, O2, the bond is nonpolar covalent.
Covalent bond
Oxygen has the greater bond energy.
It's a chemical bond
Oxygen can form 2 bonds.
Oxygen is an element so it does not bond it is pure but if you join two oxygens they are covalent bonded
Covalent bond