No. Sodium and Chlorine form an Ionic bond because the difference of their electronegativities equal 2.1.
Use this:
Nonpolar-covalent bond - 0-0.39
Polar-covalent bond - 0.4-1.79
Ionic bond - 1.8+
A+ ionic bond
The bond between F and Cl is a polar covalent bond. Fluorine is very electronegative and Cl is not as much. The difference is large enough to be considered polar.
Non-polar. The electronegativity difference is 0.2 which is non-polar covalent.
It can be either a polar covalent bond or a nonpolar covalent bond. C-Cl is an example of a polar covalent bond, while C-C is a good example of a nonpolar covalent bond.
Atoms are same,so no e negativity difference.They share electrons equally.So bond is non polar.
polar covalent bond.
Non-polar- both atoms have the same electronegativity as they are both chlorine!
A+ ionic bond
The bond between F and Cl is a polar covalent bond. Fluorine is very electronegative and Cl is not as much. The difference is large enough to be considered polar.
Non-polar. The electronegativity difference is 0.2 which is non-polar covalent.
It can be either a polar covalent bond or a nonpolar covalent bond. C-Cl is an example of a polar covalent bond, while C-C is a good example of a nonpolar covalent bond.
Atoms are same,so no e negativity difference.They share electrons equally.So bond is non polar.
The bond chlorine-hydrogen is polar covalent.
polar covalent bond is formed between these two atoms
It's a covalent bond. Carbon is non metal and does not form cations in stable compounds. The bond is polar, as the electronegativity of Cl is higher than that of C.
it is the compound of non polar covalent bond It is a diatomic molecule of chlorine.
MgCl2 is an ionic compound. there is a large difference in electronegativity between Mg and Cl.