sodium and flourine
calcium and lithium are both metals and dont form bond with each other. sodium and flourine form ionic compound, sodium fluoride. nitrogen and oxygen form covalent bond in the nitrogen oxides. helium and argon are both nonmetals / noble gases and dont form bond with each other.
Lithium is a metal and not a compound. So there is only metallic bond in lithium and not covalent.
No, Ionic
Ionic. But it does have covalent bonding characteristics aswell
sodium and flourine
calcium and lithium are both metals and dont form bond with each other. sodium and flourine form ionic compound, sodium fluoride. nitrogen and oxygen form covalent bond in the nitrogen oxides. helium and argon are both nonmetals / noble gases and dont form bond with each other.
Lithium is a metal and not a compound. So there is only metallic bond in lithium and not covalent.
Lithium oxide is an ionic lattice.
yes
No, Ionic
Ionic. But it does have covalent bonding characteristics aswell
Yes, PF3 is covalent. Covalent bonds are formed between nonmetals, and since Phosphorous and Flourine are both nonmetals, they will form covalent bonds.
Lithium chloride is an ionic compound and has no covalent bonds.
yes,its a strong base compound
An ionic covalent bond forms when a metal bonds to a non-metal that is bonded to another non-metal. One such as this would be LiOH. The Oxygen and Hydrogen form a covalent bond and the Lithium to the Hydroxide forms an ionic bond.
ionic bond