True. Water is slightly negative on the oxygen end and slightly positive on the hydrogen's end of the molecule. This is because oxygen is much more electronegative than hydrogen, so the electrons in the covalent bond spend more time around the oxygen.
false
water is polar. That's why there's surface tension, because the positive side of one molecule is attracted to the negative side of another, so the molecules tend to stick together.
water is a polar, covalent molecule. it doesn't have an unsharing molecule. its also has to do with the 8 properties of water.
h2o is an example of a polar molecule because when you look at the molecule it is not symmetrical. therefore it is polar.
All heteroatomic molecules are polar it depends on the structure of overall molecule to know whether the whole molecule is polar or not, water is polar cuz dipole between Hydrogen and Oxygen and that between Oxygen and lone pair don't cancel each other.
True, it is non polar.
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
Water molecule is an important and good example of polar covalent molecule
Water molecule is an important and good example of polar covalent molecule
Nope, its FALSE :)
AnswerH2O, otherwise known as water.
ammonia
Water is a polar molecule.
Water IS a polar molecule.
The compound with both a non-polar tail and a polar head is called an amphiphilic molecule. An amphiphilic molecule can form micelles. These such micelles is how detergents dissolve dirt. A big example of micelles are phospholipids.
water is polar. That's why there's surface tension, because the positive side of one molecule is attracted to the negative side of another, so the molecules tend to stick together.
A polar molecule
water is a polar, covalent molecule. it doesn't have an unsharing molecule. its also has to do with the 8 properties of water.