No. Chlorine and nitrogen are both nonmetals, and two nonmetals do not form ionic compounds with each other.
yes it will form an ionic compound.
Yes they can form ionic compounds
Chlorine (Cl2) is not an ionic compound. It is a covalently bonded element. Chlorine can form ionic compounds like NaCl (Sodium Chloride) or CaCl2 (Calcium Chloride) but is not itself an ionic compound.
The compounds in the system nitrogen-sulfur are not ionic.
Na+F form NaF a ionic compound
Yes, the elements potassium and chlorine will react--very vigorously--to form the ionic compound potassium chloride.
Yes. Magnesium and chlorine will form the ionic compound magnesium chloride, MgCl2.
Sodium Na + and Cl- Cholrine form an ionic compound
They will form a covalent compound.
Zinc and chlorine react to form the binary ionic compound zinc chloride, which has the formula ZnCl2.
Yes, Magnesium easily forms an ionic compound with chlorine. It is called magnesium chloride, MgCl2