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No. Chlorine and nitrogen are both nonmetals, and two nonmetals do not form ionic compounds with each other.
It's ionic if it is bonded with hydrogen or other metals, and it's covalent if with other nonmetals, but since bromine is a halogen, it is most likely to form ionic compounds.
Bromine (Br) All nonmetals except the noble gasses will react with lithium to form ionic compounds.
- If you think only to isolated elements all these elements can form polyatomic compounds.- Calcium and sodium form ionic compounds.- H, N, O, Cl can form ionic or covalent compouds.
Not a lot! Sodium is a reactive metal, nitrogen is an unreactive diatomic gas. Sodium forms compounds where it loses an electron, to form the Na+ ion. Nitrogen forms covalent compounds such as NH3 and ionic compounds where it gains three electrons to form the N3- ion.
The compounds in the system nitrogen-sulfur are not ionic.
Nitrogen and hydrogen don't form ionic compounds. they form only covalent compounds as in ammonia (NH3) or hydrazine (H2N-NH2) etc
No. Chlorine and nitrogen are both nonmetals, and two nonmetals do not form ionic compounds with each other.
All group 1 metals and group 2 elements excluding beryllium will form ionic compounds with nitrogen.
It's ionic if it is bonded with hydrogen or other metals, and it's covalent if with other nonmetals, but since bromine is a halogen, it is most likely to form ionic compounds.
No it doesn't .. Ionic compounds are formed between a metal and no-metal. Oxygen is non-metal and bromine as well. However they from a Covalent bond.
Bromine (Br) All nonmetals except the noble gasses will react with lithium to form ionic compounds.
Bromine (Br) All nonmetals except the noble gasses will react with lithium to form ionic compounds.
Nitrogen and bromine will form a covalent bond; they are both nonmetals.
- If you think only to isolated elements all these elements can form polyatomic compounds.- Calcium and sodium form ionic compounds.- H, N, O, Cl can form ionic or covalent compouds.
Not a lot! Sodium is a reactive metal, nitrogen is an unreactive diatomic gas. Sodium forms compounds where it loses an electron, to form the Na+ ion. Nitrogen forms covalent compounds such as NH3 and ionic compounds where it gains three electrons to form the N3- ion.
The ionic notation for Bromine is Br-. It gains one electron to form Br-