No, this is an ionic compound, as calcium is a metal and bromine is a non-metal. A good rule to remember for the future is that elements to the left of the "staircase" on the Periodic Table are metals (except for Hydrogen, a non-metal)and elements to the right are non-metals, while those bordering the "staircase" are metalloids. A metal will always bond with a non-metal in an ionic bond. Covalent bonds occur when two non-metals "share" electrons. You can also judge a compound's bonding type based on its electronegativity difference, but judging by the simplicity of the question that has just been asked, you will likely learn that at a later point of your education in chemistry anyway, and an explanation would be redundant.
No. Calcium bromide is formed by ionic bonding.
Ionic
ionic
Ionic
Ionic
CCl4 = All bonds are polar covalent. CaBr2 = ionic bond
its ionic
Barium bromide is ionic.
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
Ionic
CCl4 = All bonds are polar covalent. CaBr2 = ionic bond
its ionic
Barium bromide is ionic.
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
Ionic
No, it is ionic
Ionic bond
Strontium bromide is an ionic compound.
it will form a ionic bond
Calcium and fluorine will form an ionic bond.
Ionic
it is an ionic compound