If you mean "what type of bonding is present in urea?" then the general answer is covalent bonds. The carbon is sp2-hybridized. The C=O bond is a double bond (a carbonyl group) while the C-N bonds are single but have significant double bond character leading to a planar (flat) structure. The C-H bonds are single bonds. In terms of intramolecular bonding, there are hydrogen bonds between urea molecules (each carbonyl oxygen accepts 4, from N-H hydrogens). This leads the urea's high solubility in water.
The formula for urea is H2N-C=O-NH2, so it has two amide bonds, i.e. O=C-NH2, and these are essentially peptide bonds, so the answer would be 2 peptide bonds. The caveat is that urea is not a dipeptide because the peptide bonds are not made from amino acids.
it is the double bond between the Carbon and Oxygen
Covalent bonds.
the molecule is non-polar the CH bonds are also non-polar
HCl (hydrogen chloride) has a covalent bond, polar.
Polar. the C-O bond are polar
The difference in electronegativity between th atoms foming the covalent bond leads to the polar nture of the bond. If the atoms are alike then there is NO difference in electronegativity- so - no bond polarity
IOF5 is polar - O has a double bond
Urea's polar because the bond moment is not null. another reason is cause the oxygen is more electronegative than amine bond (nitrogen and hydrogen)
The structure of urea determines its polarity. The C=O portion of the molecule is polar, as well as the two N-H bonds on the opposite end. Therefore urea is a polar molecule. Refer to the related links for an illustration.
Urea is sp2 hybridized, so the bond angles are ~120 degrees.
Sugar doesn't dissolve in water naturally making it polar
In the increasing order, they are non polar covalent bond < polar covalent bond < ionic bond.
This compound is polar covalent.
Electrons are shared unequally in a polar bond.
It is polar bond, a very weak polar bond the ^EN=0.5 but in many cases it is more practical to say that it is non-polar.
CF3Cl is a polar molecule. There are three C-F polar bond and and C-Cl polar bond. The bond dipoles do not cancel out and hence the compound is a polar molcule.
== ==Yes, a covalent bond is stronger than a polar bond.
i was doing my chemistry hw, and found this. I hope that it helps you too: polar covalent
carbon-oxygen bond is polar covalent bond