Dihydrogen oxide, water, is a polar covalent compound.
Water has a polar molecule.
Water is a polar covalent bonded molecule. H-O-H.
Ionic
Iron(II) sulfide plus hydrochloric acid produces iron(II) chloride plus hydrogen sulfide. * H2S is normally just called hydrogen sulfide. FeS + 2HCl --> FeCl2 + H2S
Dihydrogen monosulfide (H2S) is a bent molecule. It has tetrahedral electronic geometry and due to the two lone pairs of electrons on the sulfur, it is bent.
No, like water it is bent
The formula for dihydrogen monosulfide is H2S.
Dihydrogen monosulfide (H2S) is a bent molecule. It has tetrahedral electronic geometry and due to the two lone pairs of electrons on the sulfur, it is bent.
Dihydrogen oxide, water, is a polar covalent compound.
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
Water has a polar molecule.
Dihydrogen Oxide. Aka Water.
The shape of H2S is bent similar to water, which is very polar. However sulfur is less electronegative than oxygen. In fact the difference in electronegativity between H and S is less than 0.4 (S = 2.58 and H = 2.20). This means that a S-H bond is technically defined as a non-polar bond.Because of the two lone pairs of electrons on sulfur, H2S does have a measurable dipole moment.So dihydrogen monosulfide is best described as slightly polar, due to the combination of shape and "slightly polar" bonds. Due to the fact that H2S is a borderline case, you will often see it listed with both polar and non-polar molecules.
Water is a polar covalent bonded molecule. H-O-H.
CS
Nitrogen monosulfide. Mononitrogen monosulfide is an inorganic compound with the formula SN. It is the sulfur analogue of the radical nitric oxide, NO. It can be produced through electrical discharges in mixtures of nitrogen and sulfur compounds, as well as the reaction of nitrogen with sulfur vapor.