Santa clause crawled into my bed and told me because he said so
CH4 has only single bonds.There are no double bonds.
No. this is an example of covalent bond, not hydrogen bond
C-H bond of CH4 is polar.It is a covalent bond
C-H bond of it is polar.CH4 has four such bonds
the molecule is non-polar the CH bonds are also non-polar
Bond angle is 109.5 degrees.It is equal in every bond
The CH4 Bond Angle Will Be 109.5 Degrees Because It Has a Tetrahedral Molecular Geometry.
Tetrahedral angle, 109.5 0
The angle between two bonds is 109.5degrees.It is equal in every bond
in water there are two bond pairs and two lone pairs where as in CH4 there are are four bond pairs nad no lone pair. in ch4 there is only bond pair to bond pair repulsion but in water there are three types of repulsions, lone to lone (greatest repulsion), lone to bond ( lesser repulsion ) and bond to bond ( the least repulsion) , therefore due to the presence of two lone pairs in water the bond pairs are repelled with greater force and they get compressed, reducing the ideal bond angle from 109.5 to 104.5 on the other hand, ch4 has only bond pairs and they dont repel each other that strongly so its angle is greater n its 109.5..
CH4 represents a molecule, not a bond at all. The bonds within this molecule are covalent.
CH4 is a covalent compound.It is non polar
CH4 has only single bonds.There are no double bonds.
yes it does
CH4
Methane CH4
It is stronger because the electron configuration of Carbon is 2.4 and of Silicon is 2.8.4. Because more rings are filled by the electrons in silicon the outer shell is further away from the nucleus. Therefore, the attraction between the electrons and protons (electrostatic attraction) in the nucleus is less than in CH4. Hope this helps.