Dinitrogen trioxide is covalently bonded.
Covalent
SO3 as sulfur trioxide is polar covalent bonded. As the sulfite ion, it is covalently bonded as the ion but forms ionic bonds with other species.
covalent
It is ionic
No, it is not a covalent bond. It is an Ionic bond.
Covalent
It doesn't N2O4 is a covalent compound
Di-nitrogen tri-oxide is this compound's name.
SO3 as sulfur trioxide is polar covalent bonded. As the sulfite ion, it is covalently bonded as the ion but forms ionic bonds with other species.
covalent b/c they are both nonmetals. A covalent bond is between two elements on the right side of the periodic table, an ionic bond is between the left and right side.
covalent
It is ionic
No, it is not a covalent bond. It is an Ionic bond.
I had this same question; because dinitrogen tetroxide has 2 Nitrogen & oxygen atoms, I wrote that it is covalent. My reasoning was that it doesn't combine negative and positive charges, both nitrogen and oxygen have negative charges.
covalent
Covalent
covalent