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NH4Br, ammonium bromide, is ionic and contains the NH4+ ion and Br- ions. The NH4+ ion contains 4 covalent bonds from N to H.
covalent
Ionic if it exists. It is an unstable salt and only solutions are available- and they might only analyse as (NH4)2S but may be a mixture of NH3 and (NH4)HS
NH4 + and F - Form the ionic bond, NH4F ------
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covalent
NH4Br, ammonium bromide, is ionic and contains the NH4+ ion and Br- ions. The NH4+ ion contains 4 covalent bonds from N to H.
Ionic if it exists. It is an unstable salt and only solutions are available- and they might only analyse as (NH4)2S but may be a mixture of NH3 and (NH4)HS
NH4 + and F - Form the ionic bond, NH4F ------
NH3 is eventually covalent because they are sharing electrons.
There are two types of bonding in ammonium sulphate. In ammonium ion, ntrogen and hydrogen are bonded by covalent bonds (intermolecular / Van Der Waals forces) as both of the elements are non-metals. Between ammonium and sulphate, both ions, they are joined together by ionic bonds.
Yes. An ionic compound is between a cation and an anion. NH4+ (ammonium) serves as the cation and Cl- (Chloride ion) serves as the anion.You can also think about it this way. NH4 bonds covalently but the nitrogen still has one remaining electron that is not being bonded, this will TRANSFER to the Chlorine; making it an ionic bond.(Ionic bonds show a transfer of electrons whereas covalent bonds are when electrons are being shared.)While it does have covalent bonds in it, yes, it is an ionic compound.
Salts are ionic. If they contain polyatomic ions,(e.g. NH4+ , SO42-.) There are covalent bonds inside these ions.
It is both
it is a little bit of both?