All of the allotrpes of phosphorus are covalent and can all be crystallised. The white form consiste of P4 molecules- growing crystals is not easy but can be done as X-Ray structures have been published.
Covalent
Yes. Nitrogen and phosphorus would form a covalent bond.
Yes
The oxides of phosphorus are covalent. There are no ionic charges.
Yes
Phosphorus can, in fact, exist as covalent crystals in the solid state. Phosphorus usually exists in the solid state as non-covalent crystals. Under intense pressure, however, the bonds can become covalent.
No, sulfur and phosphorus are another two examples for elements which exist as covalent solids.
No. Carbon does not form ionic bonds, and in this case they are double-covalent bonds.
Phosphorus forms molecular covalent bonds because it exists as discrete P4 molecules, while argon does not form covalent bonds at all since it is a noble gas and exists as individual atoms.
Phosphorus trifluoride is a covalent compound. It consists of nonmetals bonding together by sharing electrons, rather than transferring them as in ionic compounds.
Covalent
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
Yes. Nitrogen and phosphorus would form a covalent bond.
Phosphorus typically forms covalent bonds due to its preference to share electrons to complete its valence shell. However, in some cases, phosphorus can also form ionic bonds with metals to achieve a more stable electron configuration.
Phosphorous trisulfide (PS3) is a covalent compound.
Phosphorus is a chemical element, not a compound.
Covalent crystals are not necessarily opaque. Think of diamond, pure quartz crystals, pure aluminium oxide crystals these all are colorless and transparent.