no for a covalent bond requires an exchange of electrons and sodium and potassium only have one electron each and they cant lost it hope this helps someone :)
Sodium oxide, Na2O is ionic. Metals and nonmetals usually combine by ionic bonding.
Sodium chloride is ionic.
The carbon-oxygen and carbon-hydrogen bonds are covalent. Any bond formed by potassium is ionic.
covalent bond
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.
Sodium oxide, Na2O is ionic. Metals and nonmetals usually combine by ionic bonding.
ionin & covalent bonds. ionic bond form between sodium and chlorine when they combine. covalent bond is foun in sugur, fats, proteins, and water.
Sodium chloride is ionic.
The bond is covalent.
The carbon-oxygen and carbon-hydrogen bonds are covalent. Any bond formed by potassium is ionic.
covalent bond
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.
ionic because it contains a metal and nonmetals.
The bond between F and Cl is a polar covalent bond. Fluorine is very electronegative and Cl is not as much. The difference is large enough to be considered polar.
Carbon - it is the basis for organic chemistry.
Potassium chloride (KCl) has an ionic chemical bond.
covalent bond