Its a polar bond, for the electrons are more pulled towards the fluorines. It is a trigonal planar molecule. Sp2 hybridization. Hope this helped.
No, Nitrogen TriFluoride has dipole-dipole forces
Covalent because it has Tri as a prefix and it shares electrons.
NF3 is the correct formula for nitrogen trifluoride.
It is Nitrogen trifluoride- NF3
4.91 mol * 6.02214129(27)×1023 / mol = 2.96 ×1024
The name after IUPAC is nitrogen trifluoride (in English).
No, Nitrogen TriFluoride has dipole-dipole forces
Nitrogen trifluoride is nitrogen trifluoride (NF3) !
Covalent because it has Tri as a prefix and it shares electrons.
Nitrogen trifluoride has the chemical formula NF3.
This bond is covalent.
NF3 is the correct formula for nitrogen trifluoride.
Nitrogen trifluoride
NF3.
Nitrogen trifluoride
Covalent, the difference in electronegativity of 2.0 and fluoride of 4.0 is borderline for covalent and ionic, the bond will be polar.
It is Nitrogen trifluoride- NF3