Four if you consider something like methane CH4. If carbon were to bond with another carbon atom it could form up to 3 bonds (an alkyne).
The maximum number of single covalent bonds a carbon atom can form with other elements is 4.
Four
Carbon has 4 valence electrons.
It depends on the bonding. Are the elements bonded to each other? or is the question simply as the maximum number of bonds for each element separately? Carbon has 4 bonds, hydrogen has 1 bond, oxygen has 2 bonds.
Sulphur has six valence electrons and hence it can form maximum of six covalent bonds as in SF6.
no. carbon generally forms covalent bond. but carbon does form ionic bond with metal ions as in carbides, carbonates, bicarbonates (though the number of covalent compounds of carbon are more)
4
Four
Carbon has 4 valence electrons.
Carbon can form four covalent bonds
maximum number of covalent bonds typically formed by fluorine is 1
It depends on the bonding. Are the elements bonded to each other? or is the question simply as the maximum number of bonds for each element separately? Carbon has 4 bonds, hydrogen has 1 bond, oxygen has 2 bonds.
three
Sulphur has six valence electrons and hence it can form maximum of six covalent bonds as in SF6.
no. carbon generally forms covalent bond. but carbon does form ionic bond with metal ions as in carbides, carbonates, bicarbonates (though the number of covalent compounds of carbon are more)
Carbon can form up to four bonds with any other element covalently.
4. Carbon obeys the octet rule. In covalent conpounds it has 4 covalent bonds. It can also form ionic compounds (carbides).
Nitrogen can form three covalent bods.An example is ammonia (NH3) with the bond angle 106,7o.