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Carbon monoxide - CO

Covalent bonds are between non-metals only. Ionic bonds are between non-metals and metals. Carbon and oxygen are both non-metals; therefore, carbon monoxide is covalently bonded.

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15y ago
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14y ago

molecular http://antoine.frostburg.edu/chem/senese/101/compounds/ionicvscovalent.shtml

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13y ago

No, Carbon monoxide does not has an ionic bond.It is a covalently bonded molecule. It consists of two covalent bond and one dative bond(co-ordinate) between the carbon and oxygen molecule.

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14y ago

Yes, carbon monoxide (CO) is covalently bonded because both of the elements in the compound (carbon and oxygen) are non-metals.

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15y ago

covalent bonds covalent bonds

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11y ago

yes

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13y ago

Covalent.

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Q: Is carbon monoxide a covalent or ionic bond?
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