No. Two metals or more will form a mixture called an alloy.
Ionic compounds are formed between metals and non-metals.
ionic compounds have a high melting point compared to metals and ionic compounds do not conduct electricity as metals
No, ionic compounds typically form between a metal and a nonmetal. When two nonmetals combine, they are more likely to form covalent compounds, where electrons are shared between atoms rather than transferred.
nonmetals; nonmetals and metals
No, lithium and strontium are both metals. Ionic compounds occur between metals and non-metals. They are both positively charged, so an ionic bond would not be attainable.
chlorine forms ionic compounds with metals and covalent compounds with non-metals.
Metals and nonmetals tend to form ionic compounds by forming ionic bonds when they combine.
Metals share properties such as: malleability, conductivity, strength and hardness. The reason properties of metals are different is because of metallic bonding. metals are made up of positively charged metal ions in a sea of delocalised electrons. This gives them the properties listed above. Ionic and molecular compounds are bonded in different ways. e.d ionic compounds are bonded in a rigid structure so it is brittle and non conductive
Metals and nonmetals form ionic compounds.
Ionic compounds do not form between nonmetallic elements. Nonmetallic elements form covalent bonds, and form molecular compounds. Ionic compounds are generally formed by metals and nonmetals.
An ionic compound is made up of metals and nonmetals.
1) Ionic compounds are not good heat conductors 2) Ionic compounds are not malleable