Copper chloride form ionic bond. Copper exists as cuprous and cupric. It react with chlorine and ionic bonds are formed.
It is an ionic compound, because it is made up of a metal(copper) and a non-metal(Chlorine). Ionic compounds form only when a metal reacts with a non-metal.
Hydrogen chloride is covalent in pure form but ionizes when it dissolves in water.
Covalent bonds are formed between a metal and a non-metal. Cu is copper, a metal, so it will react with F to form CuF, a compound with ionic bonds.
zinc sulfate and copper. it is a displacement reaction, the more reactive metal reacts with the compound of the less reacive metal
copper!
Copper Chloride is an ionic bond. So, no. It isn't a covalent bond. :)
It is an ionic compound, because it is made up of a metal(copper) and a non-metal(Chlorine). Ionic compounds form only when a metal reacts with a non-metal.
Hydrogen chloride is covalent in pure form but ionizes when it dissolves in water.
It forms a covalent compound
Covalent bonds are formed between a metal and a non-metal. Cu is copper, a metal, so it will react with F to form CuF, a compound with ionic bonds.
zinc sulfate and copper. it is a displacement reaction, the more reactive metal reacts with the compound of the less reacive metal
copper!
Yes, LiCl is the chemical formula for the compound lithium chloride. It is an ionic compound, where there is strong electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged Li+ and Cl- ions. The lithium and chloride ions occupy alternate and opposite positions in the giant lattice structure characteristic of an ionic compound.
The compound formed when hydrogen and chlorine combine is hydrogen chloride, with formula HCl. In pure form, this compound has highly polar covalent bonds, but when dissolved in water, the compound ionizes.
They will form a covalent compound.
Only in the acid (-COOH) and hydroxy (=C-O-H) group the bonds are polar, all others are covalent.
P4O4 is not a chemical compound. P4O10 is a covalent compound. P and O always form covalent bonds.