weak
Biologically, hydrogen bonds are considered to be strong intermolecular forces.
Salt in water is considered to be a weak electrolyte. This is unless there is a great amount of salt in the water.
When discussing bond strength, the discussion centers around the amount of energy required to break the bonds, not maintain them. Weak bonds have higher negative potential energy then strong bonds.
A chemical bond is an attractive force between atoms. It is caused by the electrostatic force of attraction between opposite charges, and forms either strong bonds or weak bonds.
weak and strong,it depends
The bond between the molecules in NaCN is strong.
This depends on the type of bond: ionic bond is strong, hydrogen bond is weak.
Hydrogen fluoride (HF) forms a strong bond due to the high electronegativity difference between hydrogen and fluorine. The bond is highly polarized, making it strong compared to other hydrogen halides. So, HF is not considered a weak bond.
The property of strong and weak, as far as chemistry of atoms is concerned, it pertains to the strong and weak bonds that exist between two or more atoms. A strong bond would indicate that a higher dissociation energy is needed to split the two; eg ionic bond. Whereas, a weak bond is one which can be easily broken; eg Hydrogen bond. Also, the properties of strong and weak are given to acids and bases in the same context. Acids which easily dissociate into ions are weak and which do not are designated as strong. Same holds true with bases. Examples; weak acid is carbonic acid, acetic acid. strong acid is sulphuric acid. Weak base is ammonia, methylamine. Strong base is sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide.
A covalent bond is generally considered a strong bond because it involves the sharing of electrons between atoms, creating a stable molecular structure. Covalent bonds are stronger than hydrogen bonds or van der Waals forces.
Biologically, hydrogen bonds are considered to be strong intermolecular forces.
No, hydrogen bonding is a strong intermolecular force.
No, a covalent bond is a chemical bond that holds a molecule together.
Because it doesn't really need a strong one :]
Hydrogen bonds. They are weak individually, but enough of them have some strength ( water, for instance ) through the are not strong enough to impede the splitting of the DNA molecule when a replicative process, for instance, needs preforming.
Weak, due to the presence of water.
Salt in water is considered to be a weak electrolyte. This is unless there is a great amount of salt in the water.