Atoms are same,so no e negativity difference.They share electrons equally.So bond is non polar.
Cl2 or Cl-Cl
The covalent bond is formed between two chlorine atoms. So there difference in electronegativity is zero and the bond is non polar covalent bond.
The answer i believe is Non-polar Covalent.
Non-polar covalent bond
No, there is only a single bond in a Cl2 molecule.
In the increasing order, they are non polar covalent bond < polar covalent bond < ionic bond.
For a bond to be non-polar covalent, the two atoms involved in the bond would have to have the same electronegativity, so the ∆EN (difference in electronegativity) is zero. An example would be F2 or Cl2 where two halogen atoms bond together, and the ∆EN is zero.
The answer i believe is Non-polar Covalent.
The answer i believe is Non-polar Covalent.
Non-polar covalent bond
No, there is only a single bond in a Cl2 molecule.
In the increasing order, they are non polar covalent bond < polar covalent bond < ionic bond.
For a bond to be non-polar covalent, the two atoms involved in the bond would have to have the same electronegativity, so the ∆EN (difference in electronegativity) is zero. An example would be F2 or Cl2 where two halogen atoms bond together, and the ∆EN is zero.
its a non polar bond non polar bonds exist between two of the same element like Cl2 in this case
The bond in H2, Cl2 Br2 etc. As the atoms in each molecule have the same electrohegtaivity the electrons are shared equally.
H2O has polar covalent bonds, not non-polar covalent bonds.
No. It contains non-polar covalent bond.
Polar covalent. The difference in electronegtivity is insufficient for an ionic bond
carbon-oxygen bond is polar covalent bond