Covalent. Its on the right of the staircase.
No. Calcium and sulfur will form an ionic bond.
Sulfur and oxygen will form polar covalent bond
No. Carbon does not form ionic bonds, and in this case they are double-covalent bonds.
Tin can form weakly ionic bonds with several non metals including oxygen, sulfur and chlorine.
Sulfur and oxygen form a covalent bond. You would expect this, since they are both non-metals. To get an ionic bond you need a metal bonding with a non-metal.
No. Calcium and sulfur will form an ionic bond.
Sulfur and oxygen will form polar covalent bond
No. Carbon does not form ionic bonds, and in this case they are double-covalent bonds.
Tin can form weakly ionic bonds with several non metals including oxygen, sulfur and chlorine.
Sulfur and oxygen form a covalent bond. You would expect this, since they are both non-metals. To get an ionic bond you need a metal bonding with a non-metal.
Covalent (molecular) bonds form between a non-metal and a non-metal, while ionic bonds form between a metal and a non-metal. Hydrogen and sulfur are two non-metals.
Ionic
it will form a ionic bond
Sulfur can form both ionic and covalent compounds. For example, sulfur dioxide is a covalent compound whereas sulfides of metals are ionic compounds.
Sulfur will form covalent bonds with itself and other nonmetals, but will form ionic bonds with most metals.
Cesium is a metal and fluorine is a nonmetal. When a metal and nonmetal bond, they form an ionic bond.
ionic bond