It's Ionic.
Zinc = Metal
Chlorine = Non-Metal
Metal + Non-Metal = Ionic Bond
No, zinc sulfide (ZnS) does not contain a polar covalent bond. The bond between zinc and sulfur in ZnS is ionic in nature, with zinc losing its electrons to sulfur resulting in the formation of charged ions.
The type of bond in which two atoms share electrons is called a covalent bond.
covalent bond,coordinate bond and singlet bond
ZnS is a covalent crystal. Although composed of positively charged zinc ions and negatively charged sulfur ions, the bonding within ZnS is primarily covalent due to the sharing of electron pairs between the zinc and sulfur atoms.
covalent
Hydrogen chloride has a covalent bond.
A covalent bond which is either double or triple covalent bond.
You think probable to a coordinate covalent bond.
Nitrogen is a non-metal and when non-metals bond with each other, they from covalent bonds. Covalent bonds are bonds where electrons are shared. not only is Nitrogen a covalent bond, but it forms a triple bond due to the valence electrons attraction.
Zinc sulfide is a covalent compound.
When atoms share electrons, they form a chemical bond, or covalent bond.
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.