Can nonpolar molecules have polar bonds?
1 Answer
Sometimes, there can be.
If there is, it must all cancel out. If you consider
:..O=C=..O:
but we should note that it has two dipole moment vectors in the
←−−−−:..O=C−−−−→=..O:
These are of equal magnitude but opposite direction, so they cancel out perfectly. Thus,
However, it doesn't mean
![chemistry.oregonstate.edu)
These correspond to
![chemwiki.ucdavis.edu)
If it were not possible for
We could have treated these identical-magnitude dipole moment vectors as
→l+→r
=⟨0,0,1⟩+⟨0,0,−1⟩
=⟨0,0,0⟩=→0
which is a dot, representing the nonpolar result of two dipole moment vectors of identical magnitude and perfectly opposite directions summing together.