Although your question is at best semi-coherent, I believe that the answer you are looking for is electronegativity.
'Covalently bonded' = 'Non polar' compounds have much LOWER boiling points than polar compounds and 'ion bonded' = 'Crystallic' compounds.(Compare: (all at STP)H2S (gas, linear, covalent H-S bonds) andH2O (liquid, non-linear, polar H-O bonds) andNa2O (solid, ionic, crystal, tetrahedrical(Na+) +cubic(O2-)
NH4, or ammonium is an ion. Ions cannot be polar or nonpolar because they must be parts of larger ionic compounds. The compound would be polar.
Ionic compounds generally are more soluble in polar solvents than in non-polar. Strictly polar compound is a term applied to compounds with a polar covalent bond
Water is a polar covalent molecule. The partial charges in the molecule attract other charges, ionic or more partial charges from other covalent molecules and dissolves them. Nonpolar bonded molecules have no partial charges and the water molecules will attract each other thus not attracting the nonpolar and does not dissolve them.
organic compounds are basically composed of carbon atoms.polar organic compounds are those compounds in which the organic compounds have the properties of polar compounds.
H2 non-polar (equal sharing) H20 polar (uneven sharing)
'Covalently bonded' = 'Non polar' compounds have much LOWER boiling points than polar compounds and 'ion bonded' = 'Crystallic' compounds.(Compare: (all at STP)H2S (gas, linear, covalent H-S bonds) andH2O (liquid, non-linear, polar H-O bonds) andNa2O (solid, ionic, crystal, tetrahedrical(Na+) +cubic(O2-)
NH4, or ammonium is an ion. Ions cannot be polar or nonpolar because they must be parts of larger ionic compounds. The compound would be polar.
polar bonds are non metals bonded to non metals and non polar covalent bonds are bonds sharing electrons.....
Yes, many organic compounds are non-polar and they solute only in non-polar solvents. Anorganic compounds are mainly polar and they solute in polar solvents.
a molecule is polar if it has a lone pair of electrons or if it's not symmetrical (bonded to different elements such as HCN)
It dissolves a very wide variety of chemicals. Much of this has to do with the fact that water is polar which helps dissolve ionically bonded compounds.
Ionic compounds generally are more soluble in polar solvents than in non-polar. Strictly polar compound is a term applied to compounds with a polar covalent bond
Like dissolves like. Water is polar solvent and hence it dissolves ionic and polar compounds.
Water is a polar covalent molecule. The partial charges in the molecule attract other charges, ionic or more partial charges from other covalent molecules and dissolves them. Nonpolar bonded molecules have no partial charges and the water molecules will attract each other thus not attracting the nonpolar and does not dissolve them.
The polar covalent compounds are easily soluble in water as HCl, HNO3, H2SO4, Glucose and most of the sugars, Sugar has many polar covalent bonds, in the C-O-H groups, and the molecules of sugar fit easily into the hydrogen bonded microstructure of liquid water.
organic compounds are basically composed of carbon atoms.polar organic compounds are those compounds in which the organic compounds have the properties of polar compounds.