Two atoms of H combines with 1 atom of O by covalent bond. Water H2O is produced.
i think it will be single covalent bond
Hydrogen and oxygen are the reactants and water is the product.
Covalent bond, water molecule, hydrogen peroxide molecule, nonmetallic compound... not really sure what you're looking for, but I hope that one of these is the answer.
Oxygen forms either covalent or ionic bonds, depending upon what it is bonding with.
No because Oxygen is an element and it only contains atoms of Oxygen and nothing else, no Hydrogen at all. A compound of Hydrogen must contain Hydrogen plus something else. Water contains Hydrogen and Oxygen (H2O) so that would be a compound of Hydrogen and oxygen.
That would be a compound with a covalent bond.
i think it will be single covalent bond
The hydrogen and oxygen in water mainly have covalent bonds. However there are some ionic bonds; otherwise, water would not have a pH. It also has some hydrogen bonding, which raises the temperature of its melting and boiling.
Because you could not take a bath, for one thing, with hydrogen bonded skin. Any solution would wash your skin away as the skin, polar bonded, would interact with the water, polar. Covalent bonds would not do this as they are nonpolar.
Covalent bond
Hydrogen and oxygen are the reactants and water is the product.
The two hydrogen molecules and the oxygen molecule in water are joined by covalent bonding where they share the electron.
An ionic covalent bond forms when a metal bonds to a non-metal that is bonded to another non-metal. One such as this would be LiOH. The Oxygen and Hydrogen form a covalent bond and the Lithium to the Hydroxide forms an ionic bond.
Carbon generally form four covalent bonds.So this leaves two covalent bonds for oxygen, exactly enough for the stable oxygen bonding with one double bond. '-' is single, '=' is double: C(-H)(-Cl)(=O) which is named 'chloromethanal'
Covalent bond, water molecule, hydrogen peroxide molecule, nonmetallic compound... not really sure what you're looking for, but I hope that one of these is the answer.
Nitrogen and Oxygen being both nonmetals, they would form a covalent bond between the two.
The sulfate radical has covalent bonding. Since sulfur and oxygen are both nonmetals, they have to form a covalent bond. Only the combination of a metal and a nonmetal would form an ionic bond.