yes.
ammonia is NH3....where nitrogen makes three bonds with hydrogen!
so it does make a hydroen boNd!
~5~
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
Ammonia's bonding is a polar covalent bond.
Its hard to answer your question since you did not use commas. But... if the question is hydrogen, hydrogen fluoride, water or Ammonia then.. Hydrogen...is diatomic naturally so I'm not sure which you are referring too. It can not hydrogen bond with its self but it could act as a hydrogen donor and something like an ether could act as the proton acceptor. Then they could both participate in hydrogen bonding. Same answer as above goes from Ammonia. HF, can hydrogen bond with it's self and other molecules containing fluorine, Nitrogen or Oxygen. Same answer as above goes for water.
Ammonia can form four hydrogen bonds per molecule. The lone pair on nitrogen can accept one hydrogen to form a hydrogen bond, and the three hydrogen atoms can bond to lone pairs to form three additional hydrogen bonds. However, if ammonia is the only molecule present, this bonding pattern is problematic because each molecule only has one lone pair per three hydrogen atoms. Thus, an average molecule would likely only have two hydrogen bonds, out of the maximum of four.
This is because in ammonia there is a nitrogen atom (with a high electronegativity value) that has a lone pair of electronsavailable to form a hydrogen bond with the hydrogen atoms in water. On the other hand although the Phosphorous atom has a lone pair of electrons, it doesn't have a high enough electronegativity value to form a strong hydrogen bond.
no
It can either be a polar oovalent bond as in ammonia or could refer to an intermolecular hydrogen bond (between molecules of ammonia.
It can either be a polar oovalent bond as in ammonia or could refer to an intermolecular hydrogen bond (between molecules of ammonia.
It can either be a polar oovalent bond as in ammonia or could refer to an intermolecular hydrogen bond (between molecules of ammonia.
i guess,its hydrogen bond..
Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms Polar covalent bond between nitrogen and hydrogen atoms.
Covalent
106
Ammonia's bonding is a polar covalent bond.
Ammonia's bonding is a polar covalent bond.
No, electrons are never shared or transferred in a hydrogen bond. A hydrogen bond is just an attraction between partially positive particles and partially negative particles.
In simple terms, both hydrogen and nitrogen, ammonia's constituent elements, are both nonmetals and so will bond contently.