No. Molecules are formed from covalent bonds, usually between nonmetals.
Ionic compounds are formed by ionic bonds from the electrostatic attraction of positively and negatively charged ions, generally between metals and nonmetals.
I think so. Here covalent and there ionic.
Bromine forms a diatomic molecule, so it has a covalent bond.
It is ionic
Covalent- the small difference in electronegativity is the reason.
ionic or covalent bond can occur
Ionic bond between H+ ions and I- ions in HI molecule.
No, N2O (nitrous oxide) does not involve an ionic bond. It is a covalent compound, meaning the atoms share electrons to form a stable molecule.
The molecule that contains a covalent bond is CN- (cyanide). MgO is an ionic compound, HF is a polar covalent molecule, and HCl is also a polar covalent molecule.
No, PO5 is a chemical formula for a molecule known as phosphoric acid, and it does not represent an ionic bond. In phosphoric acid, the phosphorus atom forms covalent bonds with the oxygen atoms to create the molecule.
BrO3
ionic bond covalent bond metallic bond coordinate bond
OH is a covalent bond. In this case, oxygen and hydrogen share electrons to form a stable molecule.