Covalent
It has ionic bonds. The only time covalent bonds are formed are when the bonded elements share the electrons perfectly evenly. Particularly in homonuclear diatomics like, F2, O2, Cl2, etc. where neither bonded atom has the upper hand in getting "more than its fair share" of the electrons.
ammonium compounds are ionic compounds but with in ammonium ion three hydrogens form covalent bonds while 4th forms coordinate covalent bond.
No, it is Ionic.
There are two types of bonding in ammonium sulphate. In ammonium ion, ntrogen and hydrogen are bonded by covalent bonds (intermolecular / Van Der Waals forces) as both of the elements are non-metals. Between ammonium and sulphate, both ions, they are joined together by ionic bonds.
Ammonium acetate is an ionic compound. It is formed from the ionic bond between the positively charged NH4+ ion (ammonium) and the negatively charged CH3COO- ion (acetate).
Ammonium chloride has both ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between the ammonium ion (NH4+) and the chloride ion (Cl-) is ionic, while the bonds within the ammonium ion itself (between nitrogen and hydrogen) are covalent.
Copper (II) sulfate is ionically bonded.
The ammonium ions itself is held together by covalent bonds, but it will form ionic bonds with negative ions.
It is ionic
yes, the bond between ammonium ion and and any anion is ionic in nature but within ammonium ion nitrogen forms three covalent and one coordinate covalent bond with hydrogen atoms, therefore ammonium salts have all three types of bonds.
Ammonium nitrate has an ionic bond. Ammonium has an overall charge of 1+, making it a positive cation. Nitrate has an overall charge of 1-, making it a negative anion. When bonded together, nitrate gives ammonia an electron, resulting in an ionic bond being formed between them.
NH4Cl consists of an ionic bond between the ammonium ion (NH4+) and chloride ion (Cl-). The ammonium ion is formed from the covalent bonding of nitrogen and hydrogen atoms, but overall NH4Cl is considered ionic due to the transfer of electrons between the ammonium and chloride ions.