Generally, metals and non-metals; as sodium and chlorine in sodium chloride.
substances such as sodium and chlorine for ionic compounds basically it is neutral elements that form ionic compounds
they form elements
Ionic compounds do not form between nonmetallic elements. Nonmetallic elements form covalent bonds, and form molecular compounds. Ionic compounds are generally formed by metals and nonmetals.
Elements on opposite sides of the periodic table, for example Groups 1 and 17, form ionic compounds. Examples include LiCl, NaCl, KI, and RbBr. The elements in Group 1 are the alkali metals, and the elements in Group 17 are the halogens, which are nonmetals.
A crystal lattice forms when ionic compounds form together. The different reactions of the elements are what form the crystal lattice.
Yes. These two elements alone will form ionic sodium sulfide, and together with oxygen they can form several other ionic compounds such as Na2SO4.
substances such as sodium and chlorine for ionic compounds basically it is neutral elements that form ionic compounds
they form elements
Ionic compounds do not form between nonmetallic elements. Nonmetallic elements form covalent bonds, and form molecular compounds. Ionic compounds are generally formed by metals and nonmetals.
Elements on opposite sides of the periodic table, for example Groups 1 and 17, form ionic compounds. Examples include LiCl, NaCl, KI, and RbBr. The elements in Group 1 are the alkali metals, and the elements in Group 17 are the halogens, which are nonmetals.
A crystal lattice forms when ionic compounds form together. The different reactions of the elements are what form the crystal lattice.
both are elements. but both form ionic compounds
ionic compounds are made up of elements that form ions. It could be either cation or anion
Ionic compounds only occur between a nonmetal and metal, also Halogens and The Carbon Family do not form Ionic bonds.
The elements that generally form ionic bonds are the metals and nonmetals.
A metal and a nonmetal.
Nonmetals may react with metal to form ionic compounds (salts) or other nonmetal elements to form organic compounds.