Covalent because they share electrons
polar covalent
No, NH3 contains only covalent bonds.
NH3 is eventually covalent because they are sharing electrons.
An ammonia molecule has covalent bonds in it.
Covalent. NF3 is the fluoride equivalent of ammonia (NH3).
polar covalent
No, NH3 contains only covalent bonds.
NH3 is eventually covalent because they are sharing electrons.
An ammonia molecule has covalent bonds in it.
Covalent. NF3 is the fluoride equivalent of ammonia (NH3).
No. They are covalent/molecular compounds.
MgF2 and NaCl are ionic. NH3 and H2O contain polar covalent bonds. N2 contains non polar covalent bond.
Ammonium bromide is ionic NH4+ Br-. The ammonium ion contains covalent N-H bonds
It is a covalent compound so you could call it "nitrogen trihydride" or, as most people know it, "ammonia".
NH2 does not exist on its own, it is a covalently bonded group of atoms. NH3 is a covalent compound. It can -NH2 can exist as an amino group in a number of covalent compounds or as the amide ion (NH2-) which is coupled with a positive ion such as Na+
Nitrogen and hydrogen don't form ionic compounds. they form only covalent compounds as in ammonia (NH3) or hydrazine (H2N-NH2) etc
No. NH3 contains three polar covalent bonds.