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The hydrogen bond is not strong.
No, lithium is a strong reducing agent.
No. Oxygen is a strong oxidizing agent.
An H-bond, or known as hydrogen bond. Hydrogen bonds are attractive bonds, very strong but easy to break. Think of it as someone who has a girlfriend(a strong bond, connected) but is attracted to other girls. A hydrogen bond is not as strong as a covalent or ionic bond(a strong bond).
Strong hydrogen bonds.
It is because nitric acid is a strong oxidising agent (because it decomposes to yield nascent oxygen as:2HNO3 →2NO2 + H2O + [O])and it oxidises the hydrogen formed to water.Only 1% dilute and cold nitric acid reacts with magnesium and manganese to liberate Hydrogen gas.
Nitric acid cannot prepare hydrogen because it is a strong oxidizing agent. When nitric acid comes into contact with reducing agents like hydrogen, it undergoes a redox reaction where it gets reduced to nitrogen gas instead of producing hydrogen gas.
The hydrogen bond is not strong.
Hydrogen bromide is a strong acid.
It's a strong bond.
The action of strong alkali on reducing sugar, reverses the form of sugar back and forth.
No, lithium is a strong reducing agent.
No. Oxygen is a strong oxidizing agent.
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No. Hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force. It is not a true bond.
No. Hydrogen bromide is a strong acid.
Yes. The strong interaction (or strong force) holds or binds quarks together. As you recall, quarks make up protons and neutrons. In cases where hydrogen nuclei have a neutron or two, residual strong interaction holds the neutron(s) to the proton. Some of the mass of the nucleons, which protons and neutrons when we are talking about them as components of an atomic nucleus, is converted into nuclear binding energy or nuclear glue to hold the nucleus together.