Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

hydrogen chloride can be termed as a polar covalent compound ??Explain in detail..

Answers

Answered by mstushar2020
46
The covalent bond between two atoms with different electronegativities is called a polar covalent bond. Due to different electronegativities, the less electronegative atom acquires a partial positive charge and more electronegative atom acquires a partial negative charge and thus the compound becomes polar. Example:HCl. Hydrogen and chlorine are bonded by a covalent bond. Hydrogen is less electronegtive than chlorine, so it acquires a positive charge while chlorine acquires a negative charge
Answered by utkbkkh
60
HCl is a polar covalent bond because when when we break the bond of HCl. Charges are formed on H(+) and C(-) because hydrogen is less electronegative than Chlorine . Hope you understand it and brainliest my answer.
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