No. CO2 is a covalent compound.
No, CO2 is covalent
no
CO2 is molecular.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
No prefix is used if it is an ionic compound. If it is a binary molecular compound, the prefix mono- is not used in front of the name of the first element. For example, the ionic compound Na2O is sodium oxide, not disodium monoxide, and the molecular compound CO2 is carbon dioxide, not monocarbon dioxide.
CaCl2
no
CO2 is molecular.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
Carbon dioxide
Water contains no ionic bonds as it is a covalent compound.
NaCl (table salt, an ionic compound) CO2 (carbon dioxide, a covalently bonded compound)
This is an ionic compound, for example a salt as potassium chloride.
No prefix is used if it is an ionic compound. If it is a binary molecular compound, the prefix mono- is not used in front of the name of the first element. For example, the ionic compound Na2O is sodium oxide, not disodium monoxide, and the molecular compound CO2 is carbon dioxide, not monocarbon dioxide.
CaCl2
Salts are ionic compounds.
1. Atom- No, CO2 is made of two different atoms. 2. Element- No, an element is a pure substance, such as an atom or a group of the same atoms. 3. Ionic compound- No, if it was an ionic compound then the atoms would be charged, such as Hydrochloric acid (H+Cl-) 4. Covalent compound- Yes, in a covalent compound the atoms share electrons, a CO2 molecule looks roughly like this O-C-O (O= Oxygen C= Carbon)
A cation is a positive ion and an anion is a negative ion. So the compound you are describing as an ionic one. For example, Cation + Anion --> Ionic Compound Fe3++ O2- --> Fe2O3