Chemistry, asked by mallahaswanth8328, 3 months ago

Why is a hydrogen bond weaker than covalent?

Answers

Answered by harshithpanvy
0

Answer:

Hydrogen bonds are fundamentally electrostatic interactions. The relatively electronegative atom to which the hydrogen atom is covalently bonded pulls electron density away from the hydrogen atom so that it develops a partial positive charge (δ+). ... Hydrogen bonds are much weaker than covalent bonds.

Answered by frozenelsa626262
0

Answer:

Hydrogen Bond Weaker

Explanation:

Hydrogen bonds are weaker than covalent bonds because hydrogen bonds do not involve a formal electron exchange. The formal electron exchange strengthens the bond. In comparison, hydrogen bonds are weaker than covalent and ionic bonds but stronger than most Van der Waals forces.Hydrogen bonds are fundamentally electrostatic interactions. The relatively electronegative atom to which the hydrogen atom is covalently bonded pulls electron density away from the hydrogen atom so that it develops a partial positive charge (δ+). ... Hydrogen bonds are much weaker than covalent bonds.

Please mark me as Brainlist !!!

Similar questions