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HELP!!!!!!!! ASAP!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Do acids like

Lactic Acid
Citric Acid
Phosphoric Acid
Folic Acid
Stearic Acid

have ionic or covalent bonds?? or do they not form bonds??

2006-12-07 12:21:25 · 5 answers · asked by texas 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

5 answers

Acids are always covalent bonds. Search the formulas of all those acids and you will find that every element in the compound is a nonmetal. This means its a covalent bond.

2006-12-07 12:22:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Covalent Bonds-Covalent bonding is a form of chemical bonding between 2 non steel atoms that's characterised via the sharing of pairs of electrons between atoms and different covalent bonds. A covalent bond is shaped between 2 non-metals that have comparable electronegativities. Neither atom is "reliable" sufficient to charm to electrons from the different. For stabilization, they proportion their electrons from outer molecular orbit with others Ionic Bonds-Ionic bond, additionally customary as electrovalent bond is a form of bond shaped from the electrostatic charm between oppositely charged ions in a chemical compound. a majority of those bonds happen specifically between a steel and a non steel atom. An ionic bond is shaped between a metallic and a non-metallic. Non-metals(-ve ion) are "stronger" than the metallic(+ve ion) and can get electrons very incredibly from the metallic. those 2 opposite ions charm to a minimum of one yet another and style the ionic bond. EG: Covalent: Methane (CH4), Hydro Chloric acid (HCL), which components are all nonmetals Ionic: Sodium chloride (NaCl), Sulphuric Acid (H2SO4 ) and so on.

2016-12-13 04:51:23 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

They all have ionic bonds in the sense that they ionize into H+ + lactate, 3H+ + citrate, 3H+ + phosphate, H+ + folate, and H+ + stearate. But they are also covalently bonded organic compounds in their own right. For example, lactic acid in CH3-CHOH.CO2H, which carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms all covalently bonded into a set structure. Similarly for phosphoric acid, which is O=P(OH)3, with P, H, and O covalent bonds.

2006-12-07 12:29:04 · answer #3 · answered by steve_geo1 7 · 0 0

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acids
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phosphoric_acid

it seems there's more than just one kind of acid.
they seem to be forming ionic as well as polar bonds (one where an electron is nearer to one element than the other, like in H2O)..
the confusion on co-valence is because an acid can contain a Group of elements having covalent bonds within each other, but acting as one monolithic group, and making the vital acid-bonds with other radicals like H or even other groups

anyways, acids are not defined by the bonds they have inside, but by their pH level (less than 7.0) to which they contribute as a group.

2006-12-07 12:35:57 · answer #4 · answered by answerQuest 2 · 0 0

It depends on what part of the molecule you're talking about. Some, like HCl, is an ionically bonded H+ & Cl-. That's pure ionic. In H2SO4, it splits to H++ and SO4--, that's the ionic part. The oxygens however, are covelently bonded to the sulfur.

2006-12-07 12:34:28 · answer #5 · answered by Veronica Almighty 2 · 0 0

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