No, an ionic compound can be made up of any two substances that split into ions when put in solution (dissolved). An example of a non-metallic ionic compound is ammonium nitrate (NH4N03). When dissolved in water it separates into an ammonium ion (+NH4) and a nitrate ion (NO3).
Also, whenever an acid is dissolved in water an ionic compound is formed. for example when sulfuric acid is dissolved in water it forms hydroxyl sulphate ((H30)2SO4) which separates into hydroxyl (+H3O) and sulphate ions (-2SO4).
We need to balance the number in an ionic compound b/c Ionic Compounds must be Neutral which means that is No Charge=0
Covalent bonds are formed when atoms share electrons --- they both need the shared electron(s) to fill their outer electron shell. Ionic bonds are when one atom gives electron(s) to another atom --- the atom that has given the electron(s) has a positive charge and the atom that received the electron(s) has a negative charge
It isn't strictly true, but generally ionic compounds are not highly soluble in organic solvents because ionic compounds need a highly polar solvent to dissolve well (such as water) and in general organic compounds are not as polar as water. Remember, like dissolves like. However, many ionic compounds are very soluble in a variety of organic solvents, just not as much as in water.
Because Ionic bonds are the strongest of all in chemistry. If a compound is ionic, it is unstable and will most likely fix itself with a corresponding ionic compound.
Binary molecular (covalent) compounds are named according to the number of atoms in the compound. Each number has it's own prefix.List of Prefixes:mono-di-tri-tetra-penta-hexa-hepta-octa-nona-deca-For example:CO2 = Carbon dioxideBr2O7 = Dibromine heptoxide (note "a" is sometimes excluded for word flow)Br4Cl8 = Tetrabromine octachlorideIn comparison, ionic compounds don't have prefixes but the anion (second ion) always has the suffix "-ide"For example:Li2O- Lithium oxideCaBr2- Calcium bromideAl2O3- Aluminum oxideThe reason you don't need prefixes to specify the number of ions in an ionic compound is because the charges of the two atoms add to zero (you could figure it out if you wanted to based on the given information).
Ionic compounds do not require the presence of a metal, for example ammonium chloride is ionic and does not contain a metallic element. What is true is that the majority of ionic compounds involve at least one metal.
No they are not positively charged. Ionic bonds comprise of anions and cations.
We need to balance the number in an ionic compound b/c Ionic Compounds must be Neutral which means that is No Charge=0
Covalent bonds are formed when atoms share electrons --- they both need the shared electron(s) to fill their outer electron shell. Ionic bonds are when one atom gives electron(s) to another atom --- the atom that has given the electron(s) has a positive charge and the atom that received the electron(s) has a negative charge
It isn't strictly true, but generally ionic compounds are not highly soluble in organic solvents because ionic compounds need a highly polar solvent to dissolve well (such as water) and in general organic compounds are not as polar as water. Remember, like dissolves like. However, many ionic compounds are very soluble in a variety of organic solvents, just not as much as in water.
Because Ionic bonds are the strongest of all in chemistry. If a compound is ionic, it is unstable and will most likely fix itself with a corresponding ionic compound.
Organic compounds need contain only one element, carbon. Please see the link.
Binary molecular (covalent) compounds are named according to the number of atoms in the compound. Each number has it's own prefix.List of Prefixes:mono-di-tri-tetra-penta-hexa-hepta-octa-nona-deca-For example:CO2 = Carbon dioxideBr2O7 = Dibromine heptoxide (note "a" is sometimes excluded for word flow)Br4Cl8 = Tetrabromine octachlorideIn comparison, ionic compounds don't have prefixes but the anion (second ion) always has the suffix "-ide"For example:Li2O- Lithium oxideCaBr2- Calcium bromideAl2O3- Aluminum oxideThe reason you don't need prefixes to specify the number of ions in an ionic compound is because the charges of the two atoms add to zero (you could figure it out if you wanted to based on the given information).
Ionic compounds are mad by ionic bonding The two parts of the compound ther for become one by means of moving electronioc and beoming stable there fore the bond and the compound is stronger that conalent compounds which just share the electrons needed for the two (or more ) elements to become a compound so they are weaker
An ionic bond is when one or more electrons are transfered from one atom to another. A covalent bond is when atoms share one or more electrons. The atom Hydrogen would need only 2 electrons but most need 8.
Yes. That is usually the case.
most definately.