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They both combine elements chemically with one another.
Actinides are metals, they form metallic bonds with same atoms and ionic bonds with non metals.
Molecular and covalent bonds aren't really the same. It is chemical bonds that hold molecules together. These chemical bonds might be called molecular bonds, and they come in two basic flavors: ionic bonds and covalent bonds. A molecular bond might be covalent, but it might be ionic, and that's the difference.
Hydrogen bonds have more characteristics of a covalent bond than an ionic bond.
They can be single, double, or triple covalent bonds. Ionic bonds aren't referred to that way, and because carbon atoms have the same electronegativity, bonds between them aren't even polar, much less ionic. (Ionic bonds involve electron donation, because one of the atoms involved is much more electronegative than the other - this isn't the case here.)
A covalent bond is much stronger than an ionic bond.
They both combine elements chemically with one another.
Actinides are metals, they form metallic bonds with same atoms and ionic bonds with non metals.
Molecular and covalent bonds aren't really the same. It is chemical bonds that hold molecules together. These chemical bonds might be called molecular bonds, and they come in two basic flavors: ionic bonds and covalent bonds. A molecular bond might be covalent, but it might be ionic, and that's the difference.
Hydrogen bonds have more characteristics of a covalent bond than an ionic bond.
They can be single, double, or triple covalent bonds. Ionic bonds aren't referred to that way, and because carbon atoms have the same electronegativity, bonds between them aren't even polar, much less ionic. (Ionic bonds involve electron donation, because one of the atoms involved is much more electronegative than the other - this isn't the case here.)
Covalent. I had this same question and then found the answer! Hope this helps!
Ionic bond; ionic bonds occur when an element, mainly a metal, loses its electron ( to become positively charged) to an other element, mainly a nonmetal, ( to become negatively charged), to form an ionic compound. For example :- Na + Cl = NaCl
No. A cation is the element becoming ion that donates an electron to an ionic bond( generally metals ). Covalent bonds are shared electron bonds.
Ionic bonds involve ions (charged particles) in which one ion is formed by losing electrons to become stable, while the other gains the same number of electrons to become stable.
Molecular bonds and covalent bonds are indeed the same thing, this is because covalent bonds share pairs of electrons with their neighbor atom(s), unlike ionic compounds. Ionic compounds(mostly salts) are held together due the difference of their electric load, the bigger the difference in loading the more powerful the bond will be. Another difference is that ionic compounds split into ions when they are dissolved into solution..
Several, and they are mostly the same as tertiary structure. Hydrogen bonding, London dispersion/Van der Waal's forces, dipole moments, disulfide bonds, and occasionally (such as in hemoglobin), ionic bonding.