H2 has non polar covalent bond. H2O and HCl are polar covalent. LiI-- thats ionic- so is not molecular under normal conditions- if a molecule were formed in gas phase then that would be polar too.
H2 -apex
Of the diatomic molecules HCl has a dipole moment as the covalent bond is polar. The others H2, N2 are symmetric and have no dipole moment.
Of the triatomic molecules, only HCN has a dipole moment. HCN and CO2 are both linear.
HCN has a dipole moment because it is asymmetric and the CN bond is polar.
CO2 is a symmetric molecule and any polarity in the individual bonds cancel each other out.
HCL and HCN.
hydrogen fluoride (HF)
The answer is yes, because molecules get polarity after forming polar covlent bond,no such polar molecules can exist which do not contain polar covalent bond. Am I right?
H2 contains the strongest polar covalent bond.
The correct answer is POLAR BOND.
Particles formed from the covalent bonding of atoms are called molecules.
Generally a polar molecules (as salts) have an ionic bond.
The answer is yes, because molecules get polarity after forming polar covlent bond,no such polar molecules can exist which do not contain polar covalent bond. Am I right?
H2 contains the strongest polar covalent bond.
HF has a polar covalent bond.
The correct answer is POLAR BOND.
covalent bond
Particles formed from the covalent bonding of atoms are called molecules.
Generally a polar molecules (as salts) have an ionic bond.
a polar covalent bond
A bond between two or more polar covalent molecules is called a Dipole-Dipole attraction (or interaction).
Molecules can be polar or non-polar; bonds are what hold molecules together, but they are not in themselves polar or non-polar. I should point out that the most famous polar molecule in the world, the water molecule, does have covalent bonds.
covalent bond
No, the bond is a polar covalent bond.