Salt has an ionic bond, not a hydrogen bond.
they aren't. Any time you have an acid you have hydrogen ions.
Salts have an ionic bound.
ionic compounds
No, hydrogen bonds do not form salts such as NaCl. Salts are formed by the attraction between positively and negatively charged ions, while hydrogen bonds form between molecules with hydrogen bonded to electronegative atoms like oxygen or nitrogen.
Yes, hydrogen bonds always involve a hydrogen atom. This type of bond occurs when a hydrogen atom is covalently bonded to a highly electronegative atom such as oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine, and forms an electrostatic interaction with another electronegative atom.
H2S (Hydrogen sulfide) It is bonded covalently
the building blocks of DNA areguanine-gadenine-athymine-tcytosine-cthey are bonded together hydrogen bonds. 'g' is bonded by three hydrogen bonds with 'c'. 't' is bonded by two hydrogen bonds with 'a'
No, SH is not a nitrate. It typically refers to "sulfhydryl" or "thiol" functional groups in chemistry, which contain a sulfur atom bonded to a hydrogen atom. Nitrate compounds contain nitrogen and oxygen atoms bonded together, such as nitric acid (HNO3) or nitrate salts.
Hydrogen is a di-atomic gas which is bonded by hydrogen bonds....
Hydrogen is not always partially positive when bonded to another atom. It can either be partially positive (in polar covalent bonds), fully positive (in ionic bonds), or share electrons equally (in nonpolar covalent bonds) depending on the electronegativity of the atoms it's bonded to.
Dihydrogen because there's two hydrogen and di is the prefix for two