no its not polar because when we draw the lewis diagram of c2f4 it is symetrical so the positive and negative charges cancel each other out. so it is the same case as co2..... hope this helped. sry for bad communication. i wrote it pretty fast.....
CF4 is a nonpolar covalent compound. Due to the symmetrical tetrahedral arrangement of the four fluorine atoms around the central carbon atom, the dipole moments cancel each other out, resulting in a molecule that has no overall dipole moment.
The molecule is nonpolar.
Methyl is a nonpolar molecule.
ASCl3 is a polar molecule.
CFH3 is a polar molecule.
CF4 is a nonpolar covalent compound. Due to the symmetrical tetrahedral arrangement of the four fluorine atoms around the central carbon atom, the dipole moments cancel each other out, resulting in a molecule that has no overall dipole moment.
The bonds in CF4 are polar due to the difference in electronegativity between carbon and fluorine. However, the molecule as a whole is nonpolar because the dipole moments of the polar bonds cancel each other out.
CF4 is practically insoluble in water because it is a highly nonpolar molecule with only weak dispersion forces. This means it does not interact well with the polar water molecules, resulting in low solubility.
The molecule is nonpolar.
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
No. Carbon tetrafuoride is a non polar molecule but with polar covalents bonds. the polar covalent bonds sort of cancel each other out on each opposite side (because of it's symmetry) making it non polar overall. (CF4 is tetrahedral)
Methyl is a nonpolar molecule.
non-polar molecule
Glycine is a polar molecule.
Tyrosine is a polar molecule.
ASCl3 is a polar molecule.
CFH3 is a polar molecule.