Question
In what type of bonds do atoms join together because their opposite charges attract each other?(1 point)
Responses
ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds
ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds
metallic bonds and ionic bonds
metallic bonds and ionic bonds
metallic bonds and covalent bonds
metallic bonds and covalent bonds
ionic bonds and covalent bonds
Responses
ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds
ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds
metallic bonds and ionic bonds
metallic bonds and ionic bonds
metallic bonds and covalent bonds
metallic bonds and covalent bonds
ionic bonds and covalent bonds
Answers
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is: **ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds**.
In ionic bonds, atoms join together because one atom gives up an electron (becoming positively charged) while another atom gains that electron (becoming negatively charged), and the opposite charges attract each other. In hydrogen bonds, partial positive and negative charges attract each other, although this interaction is typically weaker than ionic bonds.
In ionic bonds, atoms join together because one atom gives up an electron (becoming positively charged) while another atom gains that electron (becoming negatively charged), and the opposite charges attract each other. In hydrogen bonds, partial positive and negative charges attract each other, although this interaction is typically weaker than ionic bonds.