BF2 is covalently bonded.
Covalent
No.the compound boron trifluoride is covalent
Quite covalent, hardly ionic (very weak monoprotic acid HBO3H2 )
The bond between carbon and boron is covalent.
It is an ionic solid.
covalent
Covalent
A covalent bond does not have oxygen in it but ionic bonds do and because Boron cannot join with oxygen it can only make covalent bonds hope that helps =)
No.the compound boron trifluoride is covalent
It forms the fluoride by forming an ionic or covalent bond with the element.Example:-HF(hydrogen fluoride) which if an ionic compound.OF2(Oxygen difluoride) which is a covalent compound
Boron and Iodine are elements but in a reaction they would form neither as a covaelent bond and an ionic bond is comepletely separate.Basically, neither can form copounds as covaelent and ionic are bonds not compounds.
Quite covalent, hardly ionic (very weak monoprotic acid HBO3H2 )
Boron triuoxide, B2O3. (If teacher says its ionic then that's OK) B2O3 is more covalent than ionic the electronegativity difference is only 1.4 and boron is not a metal. It is best described as a giant covalent molecule.
The bond between carbon and boron is covalent.
It is an ionic solid.
Covalent, the difference in electronegativity of 2.0 and fluoride of 4.0 is borderline for covalent and ionic, the bond will be polar.
Ionic compounds do not have prefixes but covalent compounds have prefixes. “Aluminum chloride” is a ionic compound and "boron tri-chloride” is a covalent compound.