no, i don't think they are!:)
Yes
adhesion
Hydrogen bonds are considered weak bonds, however in large biochemical molecules, they can act as a stabilizer. An example is a protein, which contains numerous weak bonds (Hydrogen, van der Waals, and hydrophobic), after the primary structure.
No. Hydrogen bonds form between hydrogen and a very electronegetive when hydrogen is directly bonded to one of fluorine, oxygen and nitrogen. A common example in which hydrogen bonding occurs is water.
no
no, i don't think they are!:)
Hydrogen bonds are the reason for cohesion and Van Der Waals equation is the cause of adhesion.
They type of chemical bond that is responsible for the properties of adhesion and cohesion is hydrogen bonding. In cohesion the water's hydrogen bonds make water self-sticky, it beads up. In adhesion water has the ability to climb up the wall of any container it is in.
Hydrogen Bonds
No, hydrogen bonds are not (in general) an example of adhesion. Adhesion is a phenomenon that occurs between two originally separate entities in the solid state, if, when the two entities are pressed together, optionally with a third phase that need not necessarily be solid initially, the originally distinct solid entities cling to one another so that the new entity created by adhesion can be moved and otherwise manipulated by forces that act directly upon a part of the new solid entity that corresponds to only one of the original entities. Hydrogen bonding could, in principle, contribute to an adhesive interaction, but the two phenomena, hydrogen bonding and adhesion, are otherwise distinct and unrelated.
Hydrogen bonds
Yes
adhesion
Intermolecular force holds large numbers of different molecules together.
Adhesion
Coming loose is a non-example of adhesion.