Hydrogen bonds are not the weakest bonds.
It's damned strong
Hydrogen bond is not the weakest.
Hydrogen bonding is a type of intermolecular force of attractionAdded:This is between molecules.It is not as strong as chemical bonding within molecules (intramolecular) though.
the hydrogen bonding is possible in oxygen, nitrogen,and fluorine
The hydrogen bonding present between the two molecules is known as intermolecular hydrogen bonding, the molecules may be similar or may be dissimilar. The molecules having intermolecular hydrogen bonding have high melting and boiling points and low volatility. They are more soluble in water as compared to the molecules having intramolecular hydrogen bonding.
Yes, The hydrogen atom that is covalently bonded to the oxygen can form hydrogen bonding, because the C-H bonds aren't polar enough.
Since each of these molecules contain an -OH group, ethanoic acid exhibits hydrogen bonding.
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.
the weakest bond between molecules is H-bonding. but H-bonding don't exist between atoms,it's an intermolecure force.
hydrogen bonds are the weakest .Covalent bonds are the strongest.
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.
Van der Waal's forces, or hydrogen bonding.
weakest to strongest: they are in this order: London dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding, ionic
weakest to strongest: they are in this order: London dispersion, dipole-dipole, hydrogen bonding, ionic
London dispersion forces are the weakest type of chemical bonding.
Hydrogen bonding. Perhaps Van der Waal's forces could be included as weak bonds.
No, it is the strongest. Covalent is the weakest.