Nitrogen dioxide is a compound with covalent bonds.
There is no known species as N2O6. NO3 is a transient planar molecule, with an unpaired electron. N2O5 in the solid is NO2+ NO3- in the vapour and solution it is molecular, probably O2-N-O-NO2. N2O4 is a planar molecule O2N-NO2
Cu(NO2)3 doesn't exist, but Cu(NO2)2 does. It is ionic, even though the NO2 anion is covalent.
Its a covalent bond
Nitrogen dioxide.
molecular
There is no known species as N2O6. NO3 is a transient planar molecule, with an unpaired electron. N2O5 in the solid is NO2+ NO3- in the vapour and solution it is molecular, probably O2-N-O-NO2. N2O4 is a planar molecule O2N-NO2
Cu(NO2)3 doesn't exist, but Cu(NO2)2 does. It is ionic, even though the NO2 anion is covalent.
This bond is covalent.
Nitrogen dioxide.
Its a covalent bond
molecular
Covalent. The electronegativity difference between N and O is small.
NO2^-, the nitrite anion, is made with covalent bonds between N and O. It is polar. When combined with a metal atom, it forms an ionic bond, such as in NaNO2.
Ionic
Molecules of NO2 contain covalent bonds
Nitrogen dioxide.
Yes nitrogen dioxide is a covalent compound.