carbon dioxide
No. sulphur dioxide has polar covalent bond and is a polar covalent compound.
true
A carbon dioxide molecule is made of 2 oxygen atoms and 1 carbon atom.
CO2 , carbon dioxide (2 linear, opposite dipoles O=C=O)
non-polar molecule
Carbon dioxide is a non-polar molecule containing polar covalent bonds in its atoms.
carbon dioxide
The fact that they are joined by polar covalent bonds is irrelevant as intermolecular bonds do not usually determine the polarity of intramolecular bonds. Sulphur dioxide is angular in shape, presumably due to the extra electron shell as sulphur and oxygen are in the same group. This means one side of the molecule is more negative than the other and vise versa. This is what makes it a polar molecule. CO2 is linear and so there is no definitive negative side
No. Because of it's symmetry carbon dioxide is nonpolar.FalseLove, Nessa
SOLUBILITY OF SULPHUR IN CARBON DISULPHIDE:Because carbon disulphide and sulphur both are non polar molecules therefore, sulphur is soluble in carbon disulphide while water is a polar molecule and not allow sulphur to dissolve
No. sulphur dioxide has polar covalent bond and is a polar covalent compound.
It is a non-polar molecule. But it has polar covalent bonds between its atoms
No. Carbon dioxide has polar bonds, but the molecule as a whole is nonpolar because it is symmetric.
Carbon dioxide has polar molecular bonds. However, in overall, it is a non polar, linear molecule.
Carbon dioxide contains non-polar bonds because the molecule is linear and symmetrical, resulting in equal sharing of electrons between carbon and oxygen atoms. This balanced distribution of electrons means there is no significant charge separation to create a polarity in the molecule.
True. Carbon dioxide is a nonpolar molecule because it has a symmetrical linear shape with the same atoms on either side of the central carbon atom, resulting in a balanced distribution of charge.