The hydrogen bond is more stronger than intermolecular interaction(Vanderwaals force)
a hydrogen bond is stronger than van der waals forces
No. Refer to the related link to see a Wikipedia article on van der waal forces.
Hydrogen fluoride as it is a hydrogen bond.
As long as the hydrogen is attached to Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen the bonding will be a hydrogen bond.
A "hydrogen bond" - a intermolecular force caused by large difference in electronegativity. [Hydrogen has a very low electronegativity whilst Fluorine, Oxygen and Nitrogen all have a very high electronegativity so an electrostatic attraction exists]
The strongest chemical bond is the ionic bond. Ionic bond strengths are greater than covalent bond strengths.answer 2it is known that covalent bond is stronger.
yes, they can accept the hydrogen bond with water (they don't have a hydrogen to hydrogen bond with other ketones however.)
water has stronger hydrogen bond
Nope. Ethanoic has a stronger hydrogen bond
no
No, an ionic bond is considerably stronger than a hydrogen bond.
No. A hydrogen bond isn't even an actual bond. It is a form of intermolecular attraction.
A covalent bond involves the sharing of electrons, while hydrogen bonding does not.
I would imagine Hydrogen Bond. It is hydrogen bond because hydrogen fluoride and water have a large dipole. The electronegative atom attracts electrons away from the hydrogen atom leaving the hydrogen atom almost unshielded proton with a partial positive charge.
Hydrogen fluoride as it is a hydrogen bond.
No, hydrogen bonds are weak in comparison to both ionic and covalent bonds.
false***Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. Not a bond.
hydrogen bonding in molecules is stronger
a h-bond is 20 times as strong as a covalent bond