Boron and Iodine are elements but in a reaction they would form neither as a covaelent bond and an ionic bond is comepletely separate.
Basically, neither can form copounds as covaelent and ionic are bonds not compounds.
Covalent
It is not ionic, it is covalent.
This is an ionic compound.
A covalent bond does not have oxygen in it but ionic bonds do and because Boron cannot join with oxygen it can only make covalent bonds hope that helps =)
No. According to electronegativities, it is Covalent. Ionic is between a metal and a nonmetal
No, they are both halogens and nonmetals with a electronegativity too close together to form an ionic bond. They, if ever bonded, would form a covalent, or polar covalent bond.
No.the compound boron trifluoride is covalent
Iodine chloride is a covalent compound.
Molecules can be ionic OR covalent, but not both. PbI2 (lead iodine), however, is ionic.
No. They will make covalent compounds as in ICl or ICl3.
Covalent
Ionic compounds do not have prefixes but covalent compounds have prefixes. “Aluminum chloride” is a ionic compound and "boron tri-chloride” is a covalent compound.
Boron triuoxide, B2O3. (If teacher says its ionic then that's OK) B2O3 is more covalent than ionic the electronegativity difference is only 1.4 and boron is not a metal. It is best described as a giant covalent molecule.
A solution of iodine is covalent.
It is not ionic, it is covalent.
ionic
Strontium nitride is an ionic compound.
im guessing covalent compound It is inadequate to discuss about a telephone in terms of ionic and covalent compounds. But, plastics are covalent compounds.