CuO has an ionic bond, so it would be considered polar.
CuO is copper (II) oxide, also known as cupric oxide.
Is BO ionic or a molecular
The simplest description is that it is ionic, and the argument is that the difference in electronegativity causes a full transfer of electrons. It is high melting solid and certainly i not molecular. As with many metal oxides the real bonding is somewhere between ionic and covalent, and this is particularly true for metals other than those in group1 and 2. I personally do not like the categorisation of compounds into ionic and molecular. Many macro crystalline solids are covalent.
It is ionic because chromium is a metal.
CuO has an ionic bond, so it would be considered polar.
CuO is copper (II) oxide, also known as cupric oxide.
Is BO ionic or a molecular
CO is molecular
Iron(III) bromide is an ionic compound.
It is ionic because chromium is a metal.
The simplest description is that it is ionic, and the argument is that the difference in electronegativity causes a full transfer of electrons. It is high melting solid and certainly i not molecular. As with many metal oxides the real bonding is somewhere between ionic and covalent, and this is particularly true for metals other than those in group1 and 2. I personally do not like the categorisation of compounds into ionic and molecular. Many macro crystalline solids are covalent.
HCIO4 is an ionic compound.
Ionic Molecular
Molecular because it is between 2 non-metals.
Ammonia is a molecular compound and not ionic.
Molecular