No. There is no such thing as an "ionic bonded molecule," as molecules, by definition, are helld together by covalent bonds. Ionic compounds are not molecular. Some ionic compounds disassociated in water while others do not.
No. There is no such thing as an "ionic bonded molecule," as molecules, by definition, are helld together by covalent bonds. Ionic compounds are not molecular. Some ionic compounds disassociated in water while others do not.
Ionic bonds are easily disrupted in aqueous solution because water molecules can surround and separate the ions, breaking the bond. Hydrogen bonds can also be disrupted in water as the polarity of water molecules can interfere with the hydrogen bonding between molecules.
Potassium iodide is ionic.
becuas e they are spazticated compounds
Water "auto-ionises" - forming H+ and OH- H2O <-> H+(aq) + OH- the H+aq means that the H+ is attached to water molecules or hydrogen bonded "clumps" of water molecules"
Water is a polar covalent molecule. The partial charges in the molecule attract other charges, ionic or more partial charges from other covalent molecules and dissolves them. Nonpolar bonded molecules have no partial charges and the water molecules will attract each other thus not attracting the nonpolar and does not dissolve them.
Because it's an ionic compound and all ionic compounds disassociate in water solvents. They break apart into separate ions and form an electrolytic solution. In this case it would be the H+ cation and the (O2)2- anion from hydrogen peroxide which is H2O2
No
interaction with water, dipole dipole interaction, within the phospholipid itself covalent
Polar covalent molecules are likely to dissolve in water because they have partial positive and negative charges that can interact with water molecules through dipole-dipole interactions. Ionic molecules also dissolve in water as the positive and negative ions are attracted to the polar water molecules. Nonpolar covalent molecules do not dissolve well in water because they lack partial charges that can interact with water molecules.
No, the tendency of water molecules to attract each other is due to hydrogen bonding, not ionic bonding. Ionic bonding occurs between ions of opposite charges, while hydrogen bonding occurs between a hydrogen atom bonded to an electronegative atom (like oxygen) and another electronegative atom.
Just the opposite, the water will break down the ionic bond.