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Oh yes, potassium and chlorine form an ionic bond.
hydrogen sulfide
Any metal atom will form an ionic bond with chlorine, as long as there is a complete transfer of electrons and both atoms become stable.
They form an ionic bond.
Magnesium is a group II metal and chlorine is a nonmetal halogen. So,Mg 2+ ( as the cation )and2Cl - ( as the anion )would form the ionic bond,MgCl2
This bond is ionic.
Yes
Oh yes, potassium and chlorine form an ionic bond.
hydrogen sulfide
It is an ionic compound. The bond between sodium and Chlorine is an ionic bond.
Ionic, chlorine does not share any electrons with sodium to form a bond.
Any metal atom will form an ionic bond with chlorine, as long as there is a complete transfer of electrons and both atoms become stable.
They form an ionic bond.
An Ionic bond. When a metal (Potassium) and a non-metal (Chlorine) bond, they form an Ionic bond where the metal essentially donates some if it's valence electrons to complete the valence electron shell of the non-metal.
Salt.
Chlorine can form both ionic and covalent bonds, with metals and non-metals respectively.
Magnesium is a group II metal and chlorine is a nonmetal halogen. So,Mg 2+ ( as the cation )and2Cl - ( as the anion )would form the ionic bond,MgCl2