All ionic substances are indeed ionic, that is to say that contain positively charged cations and negatively charged anions. All ionic substances crystallize into small crystal when they are in their solid form
this is because the arrangement of the electrons in the atom are all equal meaning all of the shells are full
Yes. All sodium compounds are ionic.
A crystal is a mineral where all of the atoms are in a row, this is what makes it kind of clear. What determines its shape is the amount of space it has to form in and will usually have triangular pyramidal edges.
The alkali metals all are shiny, silvery, soft, they have low densities, they can float on water, are very reactive and rarely found alone.
No, another type of chemical bonding is ionic.
this is because the arrangement of the electrons in the atom are all equal meaning all of the shells are full
Yes. All sodium compounds are ionic.
A crystal is a mineral where all of the atoms are in a row, this is what makes it kind of clear. What determines its shape is the amount of space it has to form in and will usually have triangular pyramidal edges.
All minerals can be classified into one of a variety of crystal systems.
NaCl is crystal-shaped because they are ionically bonded, and all ionic bonds make hard, but brittle crystal structures.
A crystal is a mineral where all of the atoms are in a row, this is what makes it kind of clear. What determines its shape is the amount of space it has to form in and will usually have triangular pyramidal edges.
MgO is an ionic compound and all the ionic compounds are represented by their emperical formula because actual no of atoms can not be represented due to a very huge crystal formation.(crystal lattice).
The alkali metals all are shiny, silvery, soft, they have low densities, they can float on water, are very reactive and rarely found alone.
For an element, it would be an atom. For a molecular substance, it would be a molecule. If it is an ionic compound, it would be a formula unit.
For an element, it would be an atom. For a molecular substance, it would be a molecule. If it is an ionic compound, it would be a formula unit.
For an element, it would be an atom. For a molecular substance, it would be a molecule. If it is an ionic compound, it would be a formula unit.
For an element, it would be an atom. For a molecular substance, it would be a molecule. If it is an ionic compound, it would be a formula unit.