Don't know about a maximum charge, but a "typical" charge can require 1st and last months rent, plus several hundred dollars worth of deposits, key fees, and post moveout fees.
Once you pay the bond to your landlord, they must forward it to the Department of Building and Housing within 23 working days. It is illegal for your landlord not to register and pay your bond to the DBH - if they haven't lodged it you can claim compensation from them.
Two ions with a 1+ charge will bond with one ion with a 2+ charge to balance the overall charge in the compound.
Carbon is tetravalent. So, it can bond with maximum of four atoms.
No they cannot. In Australia the money is held in trust by the rental bond board (govt dept). When you terminate the lease, the place is inspected, if all clear, the landlord will advise the rental bond board, to refund the deposit, with interest
Just one.
Don't listen to who said that i was doing a quiz and it was wrong the real answer is an induced charge.
The bond is called a polar covalent bond. In this type of bond, the electrons are not shared equally between the atoms, leading to one atom having a partial negative charge and the other a partial positive charge.
An ionic bond between atoms of opposite charge.
Two ions with a +1 charge will bond with one ion that has a +2 charge to maintain overall electrical neutrality in the compound.
9
a positive charge caused by a covalent bond with oxygen
Copper chloride is an ionic bond, where copper has a positive charge and chloride has a negative charge, resulting in them being attracted to each other and forming a bond.