Hydrogen Bonds
Non covalent
A covalent bond is a bond that forms between two nonmetals in which the atoms share electrons in order for them both to have a perfect octet of valence electrons. It is the strongest type of intramolecular bond.
non-polar covalent
Non-metals generally form covalent bonds when they combine with another non metals
There are non polar covalent bonds in hydrogen molecules.
Non covalent
NO, COVALENT BOND IS. i'M NOT SURE WHETHER IT'S A NON-COVALENT OR COVALENT THOUGH I'm not sure if its the strongest but it's not a covalent or non-covalent because those are bonds that form between atoms and a hydrogen bond forms between molecules.
A covalent bond. Non-polar covalent is stronger than polar covalent as well.
A covalent bond is a bond that forms between two nonmetals in which the atoms share electrons in order for them both to have a perfect octet of valence electrons. It is the strongest type of intramolecular bond.
non-polar covalent
Covalent bonds, polar or non-polar
Covalent :)
Non-metals generally form covalent bonds when they combine with another non metals
There are non polar covalent bonds in hydrogen molecules.
A covalent bond. nonmetal-nonmetal=covalent bond.
Nitrogen is a non-metal and when non-metals bond with each other, they from covalent bonds. Covalent bonds are bonds where electrons are shared. not only is Nitrogen a covalent bond, but it forms a triple bond due to the valence electrons attraction.
There is no general answer to this question: One of the strongest of covalent bonds is that between two nitrogen atoms in a nitrogen molecule, which is non polar covalent. In contrast, a carbon-carbon single bond, also usually non polar covalent, is relatively weak. The polar covalent bond between hydrogen and fluorine in the gas phase is very strong, while a hydrogen-iodine bond is relatively weak.