The bond energy of a hydrogen molecule is 412 KJ/mol, or 4.27 eV.
A Google search for Hydrogen molecule 432 produces a list of online books that report this value Even better, Hydrogen molecule 1312 links to the online edition of Inorganic Chemistry, by James E. House, page 71, where the concept of bond energy is clearly defined and it is shown how the number 412 is calculated.
H20 has hydrogen bonds. These are the strongest type of intermolecular forces. Hydrogen bonds occur whenever hydrogen bonds with fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen.
polar covalent bond
Approximately 1 to 3 kcal/mol.
well it is because the hydrogen molecule = the velocity of molecules in hydrogen which gives you the answer to your question.
This attraction is called hydrogen bond, what causes higher boyling point in relation to compounds without such bonds
When a molecule expands within a hydrogen atom it is released by an incorrerated molecule inside a desticated part of the atom.
True
it's simply a covalent molecule.
No. hydrogen molecule has a strong single bond with a bond dissociation energy of 436 kJ/mol.
A hydrogen bond.
Hydrogen peroxide is a molecule because it is a combination of atoms with a bond.
The bond in the molecule is covalent.
Hydrogen peroxide is a molecule because it is a combination of atoms with a bond.
This is a hydrogen bond.
A hydrogen bond forms between the hydrogen(s) of one water molecule, and the oxygen molecule of another water molecule.
Hydrogen bond
The hydrogen molecule has a covalent bond.
i guess,its hydrogen bond..
A molecule with hydrogen bonded to O, N, or F
A hydrogen bond.