N2H4 is a very polar molecule. It is arranged in a gauche formation with two lone pairs on the same side of the molecule. There is a large difference in electronegativity between Nitrogen and Hydrogen.
N2Cl2 is a polar molecule. The molecule has a non-linear geometry with two N-Cl bonds that are polar due to differences in electronegativity between nitrogen and chlorine. The overall dipole moment does not cancel out, making N2Cl2 polar.
No, N2Cl2 does not have sp³ hybridization. In N2Cl2, each nitrogen atom is bonded to another nitrogen and to two chlorine atoms, resulting in a planar arrangement around the nitrogen atoms. This hybridization is typically sp², as the nitrogen atoms engage in one double bond (N=N) and two single bonds (N-Cl), leading to a trigonal planar geometry around each nitrogen.
No its not polar
Nonpolar
IOF5 is polar - O has a double bond
N2Cl2 is a polar molecule. The molecule has a non-linear geometry with two N-Cl bonds that are polar due to differences in electronegativity between nitrogen and chlorine. The overall dipole moment does not cancel out, making N2Cl2 polar.
N2=28 and cl2=71
No, N2Cl2 does not have sp³ hybridization. In N2Cl2, each nitrogen atom is bonded to another nitrogen and to two chlorine atoms, resulting in a planar arrangement around the nitrogen atoms. This hybridization is typically sp², as the nitrogen atoms engage in one double bond (N=N) and two single bonds (N-Cl), leading to a trigonal planar geometry around each nitrogen.
No its not polar
Polar contains polar. Non-polar contains nothing.
ClO4 is polar.
Nonpolar
Polar Polar
polar
IOF5 is polar - O has a double bond
Polar
polar