That would be called a HYDROGEN BOND
the hydrogen bonding is possible in oxygen, nitrogen,and fluorine
There are a few types of hydrogen bonds. Fluorine, oxygen, and nitrogen are the elements that typically form bonds with hydrogen.
A "hydrogen bond" - a intermolecular force caused by large difference in electronegativity. [Hydrogen has a very low electronegativity whilst Fluorine, Oxygen and Nitrogen all have a very high electronegativity so an electrostatic attraction exists]
Hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine and chlorine are gases at room temperature; iodine is a solid, bromine is a liquid.
Remember FON. This stands for fluorine, oxygen and nitrogen. These three elements can participate in hydrogen bonding.
a hydrogen bond is a weak interaction involving a hydrogen atom and fluorine, oxygen, or nitrogen atom...... there for it must form, not break because it is a weak interaction!
Memorize them, there are only three, Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Fluorine.
Fluorine and hydrogen
the hydrogen bonding is possible in oxygen, nitrogen,and fluorine
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There are a few types of hydrogen bonds. Fluorine, oxygen, and nitrogen are the elements that typically form bonds with hydrogen.
Nitrogen, Oxygen and Fluorine
hydrogen, nitrogen, fluorine
Hydrogen bond doesn't involve neutrons. A hydrogen bond is the electromagnetic attractive interaction of a polar hydrogen atom in a molecule or chemical group and an electronegative atom, such as nitrogen, oxygen or fluorine, from another molecule or chemical group.
Carbon to fluorine.
Any chemical with bonds with hydrogen connecting to nitrogen, oxygen, and fluorine.
The bonds are hydrogen bonds.