The most stable bond is the bond that is most symmetrical, in terms of molecular shape. However, a sigma bond is stronger than, say, a pi or delta bond, due to the manner of the sigma bond (head-head) and pi bonds (side to side overlap).
a weak hydrogen bond
a non-polar covalent bond
A hydrogen bond.
-C-C-N- Peptide bond.
Apex: A bond from the transfer of 1 or more electrons.
Ionic bond.
xenon is stable compound.......
no it it not stable.
ionic bond calcium donates 2 electrons to two chlorine atoms and both attain stable configuration
A stronger chemical bond (such as a covalent or ionic bond) forms a more stable substance; a weaker bond (such as a dipole or hydrogen bond) forms a more volatile substance.
It's a covalent bond. Carbon is non metal and does not form cations in stable compounds. The bond is polar, as the electronegativity of Cl is higher than that of C.
Theoretically, in extreme conditions, every atom can form every type of bonds. Generally, atoms tend to bond each other by releasing the most possible energy. The lower the energy of the bond is the more stable.
The strongest electron shared bond is the covalent bond. The covalent bond is much more stronger than a single bond but it is also much less stable.
Noble Gases are stable due to the "octet" rule (they have as many electrons as they can hold) and will not bond.
An ionic bond.
Covalent bonds are stable because they are strong bonds due to sharing of electrons and they also don't ionise and eventually dont conduct electricity.
in the U.S.A. what type high or low pressure system is associated with the most stable weather?