No. Ionic bonds are considerably more easily broken than covalent bonds.
Ionic bonds are the strongest bonds
convalent bonds have the greatet bond energy.
The answer is no. If you are comparing them with covalent or metallic bonds, then covalent is the strongest in general. There are, obviously, exceptions, but in general ionic bonds are easier to break than covalent bonds.
This bond is ionic.
NO, COVALENT BOND IS. i'M NOT SURE WHETHER IT'S A NON-COVALENT OR COVALENT THOUGH I'm not sure if its the strongest but it's not a covalent or non-covalent because those are bonds that form between atoms and a hydrogen bond forms between molecules.
The two main types of chemical bonds are ionic and covalent.
The carbon-carbon triple bond is the strongest among the three. This is because triple bonds involve the sharing of three pairs of electrons between two carbon atoms, making the bond more stable and stronger than single or double bonds.
The ionic bond is the strongest followed by covalent, metallic, Van der Waals.
"Ionic" is not a type of chemical bond. The correct types of chemical bonds are covalent, metallic, and hydrogen bonds. Ionic bonds involve the transfer of electrons between atoms with significantly different electronegativities.
polar ionic i believe.
ionic bond covalent bond coordinate covalent bond
which is not a type of chemical bond, covalent, electron, ionic, or hydrogen