No, F2 is covalent but it is an element, not a compound.
It is an IONIC compound as it involves 2 non-metals.
No. It only contains a single covalent bond.
No. F2 is the element fluorine.
F2 is fluorine, which is an element, not a compound.
Non polar covalent bond between two fluorine gas in F2.
No, fluorine F2 is a homonuclear molecule so there is no difference in electronegativity. This means that fluorine is a nonpolar compound.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
F2 is covalent and KCl is ionic
F2 is fluorine, which is an element, not a compound.
Non polar covalent bond between two fluorine gas in F2.
No, fluorine F2 is a homonuclear molecule so there is no difference in electronegativity. This means that fluorine is a nonpolar compound.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
F2 is covalent and KCl is ionic
It is a covalent bond. F-F bond is covalent.
The compound is ethanol and is a covalent compound.
F2, fluorine, is an element.
That compound is methanol and is a molecular compound. All bonds in this compound are covalent.
Only in the acid (-COOH) and hydroxy (=C-O-H) group the bonds are polar, all others are covalent.
Covalent compound
Yes. Dextrose does not dissociate in water, and therefore does not release ions.