Covalent
SCl2 forms a covalent bond. Sulfur and chlorine are both nonmetals, so they share electrons to form a covalent bond.
No, SCl2 is a covalent compound because it is made up of nonmetal elements (sulfur and chlorine) bonded together by sharing electrons. Ionic compounds are formed from the transfer of electrons between a metal and a nonmetal.
The covalent compound name for SCl2 is sulfur dichloride.
KCl is not a covalent compound; it is an ionic compound. It is made up of a metal (K) and a non-metal (Cl) bonded together through ionic bonds, not sharing electrons like in covalent compounds.
no because its a covalent compound, it undergoes covalent bonding. if it was a metallic or ionic then it would conduct when molten or in aqueous state. the only element that undergoes a covalent bonding and conducts electricity is graphite, no other element or allotrope conducts.
covalent
Yes, SCl2 is a polar covalent molecule. This is because there is a significant difference in electronegativity between sulfur and chlorine atoms, causing an uneven distribution of electron density and resulting in a net dipole moment.
SrCl2 : Strontium chloride, would be ionically bonded because a metal (strontium) is bonded to a nonmetal (chlorine).
The two main types of chemical bonds are ionic and covalent.
Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
Is CsL ionic or covalent
No, but the bond in sodium chloride is covalent.