Of the true bonding forces a hydrogen bond is the weakest. Though London dispersion forces and dipole-dipole moments are weaker than hydrogen bonding.
It is not covalent, because it is the strongest type. The Correct answer is van der Waals.
Water molecules are associated by hydrogen bonds but I suppose that these bonds are not the weakest.
Triple bond would be the strongest, double in between, and single is the weakest.
An S atom has the weakest attraction for the electrons in a bond with an H atom.
Hydrogen bonding between polar molecules creates the weakest bonds.
Water molecules are associated by hydrogen bonds but I suppose that these bonds are not the weakest.
Of the true bonding forces a hydrogen bond is the weakest. Though London dispersion forces and dipole-dipole moments are weaker than hydrogen bonding.
It is not covalent, because it is the strongest type. The Correct answer is van der Waals.
Water molecules are associated by hydrogen bonds but I suppose that these bonds are not the weakest.
Triple bond would be the strongest, double in between, and single is the weakest.
Alkanes high volatility as the type of Intermolecular Force of it is Van Der Waals', which is the weakest bond.
A single bond is called a sigma bond and it consists of the end-to-end overlap of hybrid orbitals. Single bonds between are longest and weakest.
Hydrogen bonds are not the weakest bonds.
An S atom has the weakest attraction for the electrons in a bond with an H atom.
No.
Carbon