It is a covalent: The sulfur "shares" an electron with each of the 6 fluorine atoms. The sulfur's outer shell is expanded and has 12 electrons.
This website explains covalent boning and uses SF6 as an example.
http:/sixthsense.osfc.ac.uk/chemistry/bonding/covalent.asp
Good luck!
It is covalent. The 6 fluorine atoms each share an electron pair with sulfur.
It is a molecular compound because it consists of two negative charges. An ionic compound has a negative and a positive charge.
SF6 is covalent, so it is molecular. Nonmetals typically form covalent bonds with one another.
No. Sulfur hexaflouride is molecular as it consists of two nonmetals.
SF6 is a covalent bond.
Covalent
Sulfur hexafluoride has covalent bonds.
SF6
This is an ionic compound.
ionic
Ionic
It is ionic
A nonbinary ionic compound. Covalent bonds are molecular - nonmetal.
Is CsL ionic or covalent
It is Ionic
Is Ag3N covalent or ionic
Covalent
Sulfur tetrachloride is a covalent compound.