Carbon forms 4 bonds, nitrogen forms 3, oxygen forms two and hydrogen forms one.
The correct answer is oxygen.
all of them
Nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus can all form triple covalent bonds.
Yes nitrogen dioxide is a covalent compound.
Three covalent bonds. One sigma bonds and two pi bonds. This is why many explosives, many containing nitrogen, are powerful. Nitrogen's triple bond holds a lot of energy
The Nitrogen Group.
Yes, a compound of nitrogen and fluorine will be covalent.
Nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus can all form triple covalent bonds.
nitrogen can :)
The principal ones are carbon and nitrogen.
Yes nitrogen dioxide is a covalent compound.
Three covalent bonds. One sigma bonds and two pi bonds. This is why many explosives, many containing nitrogen, are powerful. Nitrogen's triple bond holds a lot of energy
The Nitrogen Group.
Yes, a compound of nitrogen and fluorine will be covalent.
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.
Nitrogen and Phosphorus.
Nitrogen has a covalent molecule.
Only oxygen. The halogens and hydrogen form single covalent bonds, and nitrogen forms a triple covalent bond.
NO2 is covalent. Usually you can tell when a compound is ionic or covalent by the elements it is composed of. A nonmetal and a nonmetal with be covalent, while a metal and a nonmetal will be ionic.