Possibly not as gold is not very reactive. If they did bond it would be ionic.
Gold is a metal and has metallic bond.
Metallic Bond, beacuse they are both metals and are not ionic or covalent.
Ionic compounds
Gold is a transition metal and sulfur is a nonmetal so the only bond here could be ionic.
No. They will most likely form an ionic bond. Metallic bonds form between the atoms of a metal, such as gold or iron.
Possibly not as gold is not very reactive. If they did bond it would be ionic.
Gold is a metal and has metallic bond.
Metallic Bond, beacuse they are both metals and are not ionic or covalent.
Ionic compounds
Gold is a transition metal and sulfur is a nonmetal so the only bond here could be ionic.
Yes, gold can react with oxygen to form gold oxide.
Gold is a metal and so its bonding is via 'Sea of Electrons'. This is not perfectly ionic nor perfectly covalent. Rather, the valence electrons are delocalised and moving within atomic orbitals of all immediate neighbouring atoms...
Covalent bonds are usually between a non-metal and another non-metal. Ionic bonds are usually between a metal and a non-metal. Since gold is a metal it will make ionic bonds not covalent.
a metallic bond
Sorry I have no ideaa ! :D
Pure platinum has metallic bonds, which are not usually called either ionic or covalent. If they must be classified as one or the other, they are closer to covalent bonds because the only ions in them are positive ones; the corresponding negative charge is present on delocalized electrons.