No, AlCl3 is polar because chlorine is more electronegative than aluminum, resulting in a partial negative charge on the chlorine atoms and a partial positive charge on the aluminum atom, creating a net dipole moment.
NO, CO SO2or AlCl3
Nonpolar
It is non-polar
Polar molecules reacts with polar molecules and non-polar molecules react with non-polar molecules.
polar
AlCl3 is the only non-polar molecule in the list provided. The other molecules (CO, SO2, and NO) have polar covalent bonds due to differences in electronegativity between the atoms involved, making them polar molecules. AlCl3 has a symmetrical arrangement of polar covalent bonds, resulting in a non-polar molecule overall.
NO, CO SO2or AlCl3
First, the symbol for any chemical element properly begins with a capital, not a lower case letter. Second, assuming the formula is rectified to AlCl3, it is the formula for a chemical compound, and no chemical compound is any kind of chemical bond: A compound has bonds, or contains bonds, or illustrates bonding. With that out of the way, yes, the compound properly represented by the formula AlCl3 does indeed contain polar covalent bonds.
non-polar
It is non polar.
Polar contains polar. Non-polar contains nothing.
No, n-octane is nonpolar because it consists of carbon and hydrogen atoms bonded together covalently, resulting in a symmetric distribution of electron density and no permanent dipole moment.
Nonpolar
ClO4 is polar.
CO2 is a nonpolar molecule because it has a linear shape with a symmetrical distribution of its oxygen atoms on either side of the carbon atom. This symmetrical arrangement results in the overall molecule having a net dipole moment of zero, making it nonpolar.
It is non-polar, covalent.
Sudan IV is non-polar. It is a hydrophobic molecule due to its long hydrocarbon chain, making it insoluble in water but soluble in non-polar solvents like oil or hexane.