No,it does not have ionic bonds.It has covalent bonds.
SO4 with a -2 charge forms ionic bonds as it does have a formal charge (sulfate ion). However in order to make the ion the sulfur and oxygen atoms are held together with covalent bonds.
no it's not ionic
because there's no remaining electrons in main atom S
SO42- is a covalently bonded polyatomic ion, and does not exist on its own as a substance.
No, it is an ion,
SO42- is the sulfate ion It is a polyatomic ion meaning that the atoms in it are covalently bonded to one another.
Yes, this is the ion sulfate.
This is sodium sulphate.
This is a ionic compound too. Sulfur shows +6 in sulfate ion.
A nonbinary ionic compound. Covalent bonds are molecular - nonmetal.
Copper(II) sulfate is CuSO4, and it is an ionic compound, with ionic bonds between the Cu^2+ and the SO4^2-. The bonds that make up the SO4^2- are, however covalent bonds.
No. Bianry compounds contain exactly two elements, an example is NaCl. H2SO4 has three elements and is a ternary compound.
Ionic because Ionic has metals or metal and non metals and for it to be molecular it can not contain metal
This is sodium sulphate.
the formula for an ionic compound that contains the elements magnesium and sulfur.Mg + H2 SO4 -> Mg SO4 + H2. .
This is a ionic compound too. Sulfur shows +6 in sulfate ion.
A nonbinary ionic compound. Covalent bonds are molecular - nonmetal.
Copper(II) sulfate is CuSO4, and it is an ionic compound, with ionic bonds between the Cu^2+ and the SO4^2-. The bonds that make up the SO4^2- are, however covalent bonds.
The simplest Gold Sulfate compound is Gold (II) Sulfate AuSO4, ionic formula Au2+ SO42-. There also exists a very unstable Gold (III) Sulfate Au2(SO4)3, ionic formula Au3+2 (SO4)2-3. Additionally, gold forms a number of quite complex sulfate structures such as (a) the Gold (III) Sulfate ion[Au(S04)2]1-, ionic formula [Au3+ (SO4)2-2]1- (b) the Auryl Sulfate compound AuOHSO4, ionic formula Au3+ (OH)1- (SO4)2- (c) the infinite sheet stack described by the formula [(Au2)(SO4)4/2], ionic formula [(Au4+2) (SO4)2-4/2].
No. Bianry compounds contain exactly two elements, an example is NaCl. H2SO4 has three elements and is a ternary compound.
Gold (III) Sulfate is an extremely unstable compound with the molecular formula Au2(SO4)3 and ionic formula Au3+2 (SO4)2-3.
It is a liquid so is molecular all the ionic compounds are solids.
I'm not sure, but I think you are asking ... you break down a compound into elements. E.g., water is a compound, two part Hydrogen, one part Oxygen. Oxygen and Hydrogen can both be found on the elemental chart.
The chemical name is iron(III) sulfate. It is an ionic compound made up from the ions Fe3+ and SO4 2-. The three in brackets refer to the transition state of the iron cation.