No. Calcium and sulfur will form an ionic bond.
covalent
The bond between sulfur and bromine is covalent.
A covalent bond is formed between two non-metals.
A covalent bond
A 12-gauge shotgun with a shell already coming out of the muzzle into the back of your skull
covalent bonds
covalent
The bond between sulfur and bromine is covalent.
Phosphorous and sulfur will form a covalent bond.
Calcium will form a covalent bond with sulfur. The difference in the electronegativity value is not very big(2.6 - 1= 1.6). Recall: greater difference= ionic bonding. The bond is only slightly polar.- has to be covalent hint: this question is very tricky ( my explanation might not make sense- but it is correct) teachers love these kind of questions
For S to make a covalent bond, it would be best to bind it to another non metal. Once such element would be H, thus making the S-H bond which is covalent. Another example would be to bind it to another S, making the disulfide bond, S-S which is also covalent.
The bond is covalent.
its covalent bond
A covalent bond is formed between two non-metals.
A covalent bond
A covalent bond
A 12-gauge shotgun with a shell already coming out of the muzzle into the back of your skull