Covalent bond exists between a carbon atom and a chlorine atom.
polar covalent
carbon
Carbon tetrachloride:- CCl4Cl||C---(Cl)2||Cl
Usually you would name chlorine as an element, and not an atom. An element has atoms, and there can be a chlorine atom. But according to terminology, you would name it as an element.
Chlorine is extremely electronegative and will steal electrons from the valence shell of sodium. When chlorine steals the electron, both sodium and chlorine have full valence shells.
a chlorine atom.
polar covalent
In organic chlorine compounds, chlorine atom is attached to a carbon. In inorganic, it will generally be bonded to non-carbon atoms.
A molecule containing one atom of Carbon and four Chlorine atoms around it is called Carbon Tetrachloride (CCl4). It has the four Chlorine atoms arranged around the Carbon atom in a tetrahedron, a pyramid with four sides. Each bond between the Carbon and the Chlorines is a single covalent bond, meaning the Carbon atom shares one of its electrons and the Chlorine atoms share one of its electrons.
It is a diatomic molecule, i.e. it exists as Cl2
The Chlorine atom has the delta negative charge because it's more negative than carbon.
The Chlorine atom has the delta negative charge because it's more negative than carbon.
carbon
In carbon tetrachloride molecule,four atoms of chlorine are present.
No, a triple bond exists when three pairs of electrons are shared between the same two atoms. In the case of carbon tetrachloride, there are four single bonds. The central carbon atom share one pair of electrons with each chlorine atom.
Carbon and chlorine; the chemical formula is CCl4, meaning that there is one carbon atom with 4 chlorines attached to it.
CH(Cl3) - carbon plus hydrogen plus chlorine. In other words, a chloroform molecule is a single carbon atom with one hydrogen atom and three chlorine atoms attached to it.