Molecule. A nonmetal to nonmetal covalent bond. Electronegativity is not variant enough among the nonmetals to form ionic bonds.
Copper Chloride is an ionic bond. So, no. It isn't a covalent bond. :)
ionic transfers electrons, coavlent shares electrons and ionic has a metal and a nonmetal while covalent has 2 nonmetals
its ionic, as iron is positively charged metal and sulfate is a negatively charged nonmetal.
Strontium chloride is an ionic compound. Strontium, being a metal, donates its electrons to chlorine, a nonmetal, resulting in the formation of ionic bonds between the two elements.
ionic bond conects a nonmetal and a metal. covalent bond connects a nonmetal and another nonmetal.
No, P2O4 is not an ionic compound because it is a covalent compound. Ionic compounds are formed between metals and nonmetals, where electrons are transferred from one atom to another to form ions, whereas covalent compounds are formed between nonmetals by sharing electrons.
Nigger
difluorodiazine contains Nitrogen and Fluorine whitch are both nonmetal elements so it is covalent. General rule; nonmetal to nonmetal = covalent nonmetal to metal = ionic except in acids
covalent because it is made up of only nonmetal elements
If it bonds with a metal then its ionic. if it bonds with a nonmetal then is covalent.
MnCl2 is an ionic compound. It is formed when a metal (Mn) bonds with a nonmetal (Cl) through ionic bonding, where electrons are transferred from the metal to the nonmetal.
No, when a metal and a nonmetal combine, they usually form an ionic bond rather than a covalent bond. In an ionic bond, electrons are transferred from the metal to the nonmetal, creating positively and negatively charged ions that are attracted to each other.
A covalent bond is formed when a nonmetal combines with another nonmetal. In this type of bond, atoms share electrons to achieve a full outer shell and increase stability. The sharing of electrons allows the atoms to achieve a more stable electron configuration.
I'm not sure what you mean by "purely covalent", since the ionic-vs-covalent distinction is expressed in terms of electronegativity, which can take a range of values (higher values = more ionic). CO is very much a covalent compound though.
A covalent bond is formed when atoms share electrons, creating a stronger bond between nonmetal atoms. An ionic bond is formed when one atom donates an electron to another atom, creating a bond between a metal and a nonmetal.
No, tetrabromomethane (CBr4) is a covalent compound, not ionic. It is composed of nonmetal elements (carbon and bromine) that share electrons to form covalent bonds.