No, Oxygen forms covalent bonds
No. There are several compounds of chlorine and oxygen, but all of them are molecular.
Salt.
Yes
A ionic bond will form. Magnesium will lose two electrons and the two chlorine atoms will pick up one atom each. It will become magnesium dichloride (MgCl2). I believe that a polar - covalent bond will form. .3 to1.7 difference in electronegativity is polar covalent. and when you subtract the electronegativity of the two elements you get .5 and that falls in the polar covalent area.
Yes... Sodium Na+ and Chlorine Cl- form an ionic bond to form NaCl, which is salt..
Tin can form weakly ionic bonds with several non metals including oxygen, sulfur and chlorine.
Oh yes, potassium and chlorine form an ionic bond.
This bond is ionic.
Does two oxygen atoms for an ionic bond
It is an ionic compound. The bond between sodium and Chlorine is an ionic bond.
Ionic, chlorine does not share any electrons with sodium to form a bond.
No. An ionic bond is a bond between a metal and a nonmetal. Since oxygen and nitrogen are both nonmetals, they form a covalent bond.
An ionic bond
Any metal atom will form an ionic bond with chlorine, as long as there is a complete transfer of electrons and both atoms become stable.
They form an ionic bond.
No it is impossible.
An Ionic bond. When a metal (Potassium) and a non-metal (Chlorine) bond, they form an Ionic bond where the metal essentially donates some if it's valence electrons to complete the valence electron shell of the non-metal.