They form SCl2 which is slightly polar covalent bond.
No, since SCl2 is bent, SCl4 is distorted tetrahedral and CH4 is tetrahedral.
SCl2
the name of socl2 is thionyl chloride
TeCl2
Polar Colvalent
it depends on the reactant. and the bond could be colvalent, ionic, coordinate, hydrogen bond or a mixture of these.
SrCl2 : Strontium chloride, would be ionically bonded because a metal (strontium) is bonded to a nonmetal (chlorine).
SCl2 No, you need Florine, oxygen, or nitrogen attached to hydrogen to get a hydrogen bond.
They form SCl2 which is slightly polar covalent bond.
Electrons are shared between the atoms that are bonded. If there is an electronegativity difference between the atoms the electrons will be shared unequally.
The chemical formula for disulfur difluoride is S2F2.
The name of the hybrid orbitals used by sulfur in SCl2 is sp^3. Valence bond theory predicts that SCl2 will have two single bonds and two lone pair of electrons on the central sulfur atom. This is exactly what you will see if you draw the Lewis dot structure.
SCl2
SeCl2 is selenium dichloride.
If it's a non-metal and non-metal, it is a colvalent bond. If it's metal and non-metal or metal and metal, then it is ionic. Magnesium Sulfate (MgSO4 / Magnesium + Sulfate) is IONICbecause it is a metal and non-metal but it has a convalent bond in it, which is SO4 (Sulfur + Oxygen).
Ionic