No.
The bond between carbon and hydrogen atoms is covalent.
A hydrogen bond acceptor is a molecule that can accept a hydrogen bond by having a lone pair of electrons available to form a bond with a hydrogen atom. A hydrogen bond donor is a molecule that can donate a hydrogen atom with a slightly positive charge to form a bond with a hydrogen bond acceptor. In simple terms, a hydrogen bond acceptor receives a hydrogen bond, while a hydrogen bond donor gives a hydrogen bond.
No. A hydrocarbon compound needs hydrogen and carbon. That is why they are called hydrocarbon compounds.
No, a CO2 molecule has only one type of bond length for each carbon-oxygen bond. Each carbon-oxygen bond in CO2 is a double bond, consisting of one sigma bond and one pi bond, and they are equivalent in length.
A hydrogen bond donor is a molecule that can donate a hydrogen atom to form a hydrogen bond, while a hydrogen bond acceptor is a molecule that can accept a hydrogen atom to form a hydrogen bond. In simpler terms, a donor gives a hydrogen atom, and an acceptor receives it to create a bond.
The bond between carbon and hydrogen atoms is covalent.
A hydrogen bond acceptor is a molecule that can accept a hydrogen bond by having a lone pair of electrons available to form a bond with a hydrogen atom. A hydrogen bond donor is a molecule that can donate a hydrogen atom with a slightly positive charge to form a bond with a hydrogen bond acceptor. In simple terms, a hydrogen bond acceptor receives a hydrogen bond, while a hydrogen bond donor gives a hydrogen bond.
The bond angle in CO2 is 180 degrees.
The bond angles of CO2 are 180 degrees.
Yes. This is the most given answer, though not precise.Carbonic Acid is formed. H2O + CO2 --> H2CO3 which in turn also forms hydrogen bonds.==========================================Actually there are no molecules of H2CO3 in aqueous solution. They don't exist.What is called "carbonic acid" is actually a solution of dissolved CO2 in equilibrium with small amounts of H+ and HCO3-, which is what makes it acidic:CO2(aq) + H2O(l) H+ + HCO3-The equilibrium lies far to the left, meaning that the CO2 stays mostly CO2(aq).As for hydrogen bonding between CO2 and H2O, the answer is "maybe".The conventional wisdom is that hydrogen bonding occurs when H is internally bonded to N, O or F, and where the H of one molecule is weakly, covalently bonded to N, O or F of an adjacent molecule. A hydrogen bond is more than simply an electrostatic attraction. The hydrogen bond has been shown to exhibit covalent bond characteristics. But, the few HCO3- (HOCO2-) molecules formed can exhibit hydrogen bonding with water molecules.The big question concerns the attraction between the H of a water molecule and a lone pair of electrons on an oxygen in CO2.O=C=O:--- H-O-HAccording to the newest description of the hydrogen bond by the IUPAC, the attraction between water and CO2 constitutes a hydrogen bond. This helps explain why CO2 is very soluble in water.The IUPAC recently has redefined the hydrogen bond.The gist of the change is that the hydrogen bond has significant covalent character rather than being merely an electrostatic attraction.Added:For a newer link to IUPAC's 'Definition of the Hydrogen Bond' by E. Arunan et all (Oct. 2010),c.f. Related links just below this page.
No. A hydrocarbon compound needs hydrogen and carbon. That is why they are called hydrocarbon compounds.
The bond angle of a CO2 molecule is 180 degrees.
No, a CO2 molecule has only one type of bond length for each carbon-oxygen bond. Each carbon-oxygen bond in CO2 is a double bond, consisting of one sigma bond and one pi bond, and they are equivalent in length.
A hydrogen bond donor is a molecule that can donate a hydrogen atom to form a hydrogen bond, while a hydrogen bond acceptor is a molecule that can accept a hydrogen atom to form a hydrogen bond. In simpler terms, a donor gives a hydrogen atom, and an acceptor receives it to create a bond.
The bond angles in a molecule of CO2 are approximately 180 degrees.
During combustion, hydrogen and carbon react with oxygen to form water and carbon dioxide. The hydrogen combines with oxygen to form water vapor (H2O), while carbon combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide (CO2).
The approximate bond angle in carbon dioxide (CO2) is 180 degrees.