Within the water molecule, there are two single covalent bonds, from the oxygen atom to each hydrogen atom. This is called an intramolecular force. Between water molecules, you have something called hydrogen bonding (which is actually not a chemical bond - just a very strong attraction), and that's an intermolecular force.
BCl3 is a covalent bond.
In this reaction, hydrogen (H2) is oxidized to form water (H2O), and a covalent bond is formed between hydrogen and oxygen atoms in water.
Oxygen and hydrogen share a covalent bond when they form a molecule of water (H2O). In this bond, the atoms share electrons to fill their outer electron orbitals, forming a stable molecule.
It depends what compound it is in. In water it is covalent. In trichloracetic acid it is ionic.
Water (H2O) is a polar covalent bond. This means that the atoms share electrons unequally, resulting in a slight negative charge on the oxygen atom and a slight positive charge on the hydrogen atoms.
Hydrogen bond
convanent bond
A non-polar bond.
hydrogen bond
An Ionic Bond
Covalent bond
Salt in water is considered to be a weak electrolyte. This is unless there is a great amount of salt in the water.
ionic
ionic
Two angled polar bonds
being kind and cleaning, feeding and giving them water regularly.
Water is removed during dehydration synthesis. A covalent bond is produced by dehydration synthesis. Hydrolysis, the addition of water, can break apart this bond.