No. Cyclohexane does not contain any sufficiently electronegative atoms to promote "hydrogen bond" formation, although cyclohexane of course contains hydrogen atoms bonded to carbon atoms by covalent bonds.
Br2 is a covalent compound. It consists of two bromine atoms sharing electrons to form a covalent bond.
The opposite of an ionic bond is a covalent bond. In an ionic bond, electrons are transferred from one atom to another, while in a covalent bond, electrons are shared between atoms.
No, Al-Cl is an ionic bond, not a covalent bond.
AiPO is likely to have both ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between the metal ion "A" and the phosphate ion is likely to be ionic, while the bonds within the phosphate group are covalent.
Cyclopentane is a saturated hydrocarbon compound, meaning it consists of single covalent bonds between carbon atoms. These single covalent bonds are also known as sigma bonds.
covalent
NO is covalent.
NO is covalent.
The bond is covalent.
The covalent bond is weaker.
The F-F bond (in F2) is covalent, and non polar covalent at that.
No, it is ionic
The bond is covalent. If the bond is made by transferring electrons then it is an ionic bond, but if they are sharing the it is covalent.
No, but the bond in sodium chloride is covalent.
Magnesium chloride has an ionic bond.
a covalent bond shares electrons while an ionic bond loses electrons. get it got it good!
intramolecular: covalent bond intermolecular: dipole-dipole interaction (smaller version of ionic bond)