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i have no idea but you should text 242.242 (chacha) or go to chacha.com. they will know
you do know what dihydrogen monoxide is, right? in case you don't, it is water, so is water a molecule or ionic compound?
Calcium Carbonate (assuming you want to know what CaCO3 is...
I'm not sure but I know that when sodium reacts with bromine it does that.
You would need to know the chemical makeup of the compound. Ionic bonding occurs between a metal and a non-metal while covalent bonding occurs between non-metals
no. it only has ionic as far as i know.
i have no idea but you should text 242.242 (chacha) or go to chacha.com. they will know
you do know what dihydrogen monoxide is, right? in case you don't, it is water, so is water a molecule or ionic compound?
2NaCl denotes two fundamental units - each consisting of a sodium cation and a chloride anion - of the ionic compound, sodium chloride. We know, of course, NaCl has a giant ionic structure and does not contain discrete units of NaCl.
Calcium Carbonate (assuming you want to know what CaCO3 is...
I don't know absolutely for certain but chocolate is an organic compound which probably means it has covalent bonding. Also is melts at a low temperature and forms a suspension in water which are characteristics of a simple molecular structure which would mean it is not ionic. No I don't think chocolate is an ionic compound.
Calcium hydroxide is ionic, and therefore polarity does not occur.
No but yes but no but yes . I didn't know. I am right. No aim not or not right
I'm not sure but I know that when sodium reacts with bromine it does that.
Nope. As soon as you see the symbol for calcium, you know an ionic compound is being formed.
The rule of zero charge helps you predict the formula of an ionic compound because you know that what anion is present, the action that bonds will make the net charge zero.
You would need to know the chemical makeup of the compound. Ionic bonding occurs between a metal and a non-metal while covalent bonding occurs between non-metals