Ionic Bond!.
Because According To My Book I Am Always Right!LOL
Actually I Don't Know But I Was Really Bored So.........
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No, CaCl2 is formed by an ionic bond. Calcium (Ca) is a metal and chlorine (Cl) is a non-metal, so they form an ionic bond where electrons are transferred from the calcium to the chlorine atoms.
No, it is an ionic bond. Calcium(Ca) has a +2 charge and Chlorine(Cl) has a -1 charge. So one Ca and two Cl give a net charge of zero. Any bond that deals with a charge, like this one, is going Tobe an ionic bond.
CaCl2 is ionic, is solid and will have the highest melting point. The rest are covalent compounds.
HCL is covalent. This is the type of bond that forms with the combination of Hydrogen and Chloride
covalent
No. CaO is an ionic compound.
NO is covalent.
NO is covalent.
It is ionic
It is about in between ionic and polar bond in CaI2.Almost every, but not all, metals bonding to non-metals bond ionic, but if the difference of electronegativity (E.N.) is smaller than 1.2 than it tends to polar.So CaCl2 is ionic (diff.E.N. 1.79) and CaI2 is somewhat polar (diff.E.N. 1.17)
CaCl2 is ionically bonded because it contains one metal and one non-metal. In ionic bonds, atoms transfer electrons rather than share them.
The bond is covalent.