Nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus can all form triple covalent bonds.
Only oxygen. The halogens and hydrogen form single covalent bonds, and nitrogen forms a triple covalent bond.
Covalent or molecular compounds form when elements share electrons in a covalent bond to create molecules.
No. These two elements form only covalent bonds with each other.
Covalent bonds usually form between two nonmetals/
covalent bonds
nitrogen can :)
Only oxygen. The halogens and hydrogen form single covalent bonds, and nitrogen forms a triple covalent bond.
Covalent or molecular compounds form when elements share electrons in a covalent bond to create molecules.
Covalent bonds, (single, double, triple)
Yes...they form
No. These two elements form only covalent bonds with each other.
Covalent bonds usually form between two nonmetals/
Covalent bonds are between nonmetals.
covalent bonds
Aluminium will form covalent bonds with other elements if the difference in the electronegativities between the two elements are below 1.7
Chlorophyll makes a covalent bond, as the elements it is made from, hydrogen, chlorine and carbon, all need what the others have and so they form a covalent bond
covalent bonds