This compound is not known today.
If strontium and tellurium form an ionic compound it would be SrTe.
No. Not all binary compounds are ionic and not all ionic compounds are binary. An ionic compound is a compound formed by the exchange rather than the sharing of electrons. A binary compound is any compound of exactly 2 elements. Examples: Sodium chloride (NaCl, compound sodium and chlorine) is both binary and ionic. Potassium hydroxide (KOH, compound of potassium, hydrogen, and oxygen) is ionic but not binary. Water (H2O, compound of hydrogen and oxygen) is binary, but covalent, not ionic.
yes.....it is a binary ionic compound
No, AgI is a binary ionic compound. Silver (Ag) is a metal, and iodine (I) is a nonmetal. Metals and nonmetals form ionic bonds.
An ionic compound is a metal and a non metal combination. AL2O3 is Ionic. A binary covalent compound is made from two non metals. N2O3 is covalent.
no it is an ionic compound
It contains two different elements so yes, it is binary.
The name of TeBr2 is tellurium dibromide.
No, Carbon tetrabromide is a binary molecular compound.
No. Dinitrogen tetroxide is a binary covalent compound.
Francium is an alkali metal that will lend electrons in an ionic compound.
Sodium chloride is an ionic compound ( a compound between a metal and a non-metal) It is also a binary compound as it contains two elements. So it can be described as an ionic compound or more precisely as a binary ionic compound. A binary compound is one that contains exactly two elements. Binary compounds may be ionic or covalent.