Nitrogen gas (N2) is completely non-polar.
See the Related Questions for how to determine the polarity of any molecule!
Diatomic nitrogen (N2) is non-polar since both sides of the molecule attract electrons more or less equally, resulting in a non-polar molecule.
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
It is a polar molecule.
No, H2O is a very polar molecule
H2O is actually a polar molecule. The molecule can split into two ions: H+ and OH-
Ioddine chloride is a linear molecule with an electronegativity different of 0.5 meaning that the bond between I and Cl is polar. Since the molecule is linear, the molecule is over-all is polar.
A polar molecule
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
Assuming you are referring to nitrogen trichloride, then it IS polar, it is NOT chiral though. NCl3 has C3V symmetry and therefor is polar. The molecule is NOT planer due to the lone pair on Nitrogen so the bond dipoles do NOT cancel thereby making it Polar.
non-polar molecule
Polar.
NCl3 could be considered nonpolar because nitrogen and chlorine have nearly the same electronegativity.
Dihydrogen monoxide (H2O or Water) is not an example of a nonpolar molecule. It is a polar molecule.
diatomic nitrogen is nonpolar because neither one is attracted to the other. In other words, they both have the same electronegativity and therefore is no pull towards one in particular.
It is called polar
non-polar molecule
polar