No, there is no difference so it would be a non-polar covalent bond that is formed.
Two atoms of different elements cannot form non-polar covalent bonds.
No, the bond is covalent, but as the atoms are identical, it is non-polar.
As a metal plutonium has metallic bonds. Salts of Pu have ionic bonds.
H and H
nonpolar
no
Two atoms of different elements cannot form non-polar covalent bonds.
No, the bond is covalent, but as the atoms are identical, it is non-polar.
As a metal plutonium has metallic bonds. Salts of Pu have ionic bonds.
Lithium is a metal and would form ionic bonds - so extremely polar.
H and H
nonpolar
Both Br and Br and H and H form non-polar covalent bonds.
In almost any case four covalent or polar-covalent bonds are formed. Never ionic!
O2 , dioxygen has a non-polar covalent bond. With other elemnts, oxygen can form covalent bonds (generally polar) and ionic bonds as the O2- ion
both covalent bonds and polar bonds
No single element can form a bond. Only 2 or more elements can form bonds. Polar bonds occur when there is a dipole moment, or there is asymmetry in the structure. For example, HF forms a polar covalent bond.