A hydrogen bond is an intermolecular bond between a hydrogen attached to an electronegative atom (N,O, F, etc) on one molecule and an atom with a lone pair of electrons on another atom. These bonds are much weaker than a covalent bond. Nevertheless, they can greatly affect the properties of a substance and are responsible for water's unique attributes. In water, hydrogen bonds exist between the hydrogen on one water molecule and the oxygen on another.
Hydrogen bonding makes the water molecule bent which results in polarity
they are related because the hydrogen bonding is among the water molecules
water is essential to all things
hydrogen bonding between H2O and covalent bonding within the H2O molecule
polar covalent bonds make the water molecule and hydrogen bonding attracts other water molecules to each other
molecule cotaining hydrogen and electronegative atoms form hydrogen bonding
The two hydrogen molecules and the oxygen molecule in water are joined by covalent bonding where they share the electron.
Each water molecule forms multiple hydrogen bonds with neighboring water molecules. These bonds are transient and easily and quickly shift among molecules.
Hydrogen-bonding molecules
Within the molecule itself, water exhibits ionic bonding. Between the water molecules, there is hydrogen bonding.
A molecule with hydrogen bonded to O, N, or F (Apex)
hydrogen bonding between H2O and covalent bonding within the H2O molecule
Water molecules are held together by hydrogen bond which is formed between hydrogen of one molecule and oxygen of other molecule. H2O-----H-O-H
A water molecule is formed by two O-H bonds. Water molecules are attracted to each other by the intermolecular force; hydrogen bonding.
polar covalent bonds make the water molecule and hydrogen bonding attracts other water molecules to each other
hydrogen bonding Oxygen attracts electrons much more strongly than hydrogen, resulting in a net positive charge on the hydrogen atoms, and a net negative charge on the oxygen atom. The presence of a charge on each of these atoms gives each water molecule a net dipole moment,. Electrical attraction between water molecules due to this dipole pulls individual molecules closer together. This attraction is known as hydrogen bonding. The molecules of water are constantly moving in relation to each other, and the hydrogen bonds are continually breaking and reforming very very fast in nanoseconds..
molecule cotaining hydrogen and electronegative atoms form hydrogen bonding
The two hydrogen molecules and the oxygen molecule in water are joined by covalent bonding where they share the electron.
Hydrogen bonding
Each water molecule forms multiple hydrogen bonds with neighboring water molecules. These bonds are transient and easily and quickly shift among molecules.