Yes, in its pure state. In water solution, the bond becomes ionic.
pure covalent/ polar covalent
Hydrogen iodide has a polar covalent bond.
A polar covalent bond. In this type of bond, one atom has a stronger pull on the shared electrons, causing an uneven distribution of charge within the molecule. This results in partial positive and partial negative charges on the atoms involved.
Covalent
The hydrogen iodide is an acid with polar covalent bond.
A covalent bond will form between phosphorus and iodine. Phosphorus and iodine are both nonmetals, so they share electrons in order to complete their outer electron shell and achieve stability.
Ionic bond between H+ ions and I- ions in HI molecule.
Hydrogen monoiodide is represented by the chemical formula HI. It is a compound composed of hydrogen and iodine in a 1:1 ratio, forming a polar covalent bond.
The bond formed between hydrogen and iodine to produce HI is a polar covalent bond. One might think it would be ionic because of the large differences in electronegativity, but the strict definition of ionic would be a metal and a non metal. This is not the case in HI. So, strictly speaking it is covalent, but has a large degree of ionic character.
Covalent bond is formed between the two atoms (hydrogen and iodine) in HI.
H2 Hydrogen gas has one single covalent bond in between the two hydrogen atoms. some other molecules also have the single covalent bonds as HF,HCl,HBr and HI.
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