Calcium chloride is ionic.
Magnesium chloride is ionic.
Calcium is metallic.
Ionic bond
Calcium is a metal, hence it has metallic bonds.
Covalent bonds can only happen between non-metals, therefore this must be ionic because calium is a metal
Magnesium chloride is ionic.
Calcium is metallic.
Ionic bond
No. Ionic.
Calcium is a metal, hence it has metallic bonds.
Calcium and lithium individually are both elements with metallic bonding and not any of polar, covalent, or ionic bonding. They could be described as non covalent.
Covalent bonds can only happen between non-metals, therefore this must be ionic because calium is a metal
Calcium is a metallic element and is not bonded covalently or ionically. It tends to form ionic compounds when it does react.
No, calcium tends to form ionic bonds when in compounds. In its pure metallic state, it forms metallic bonds.
Neither. No element will form ionic bonds with itself. Since calcium is a metal, its atoms are joined together by metallic bonds.
its ionic because, potassium chloride contains solid, its made out of solid and all potassium compounds are included in there.... so the answer is yes, potassium chloride is ionic its not covalent...covalent is made by chemical boindings and metallic bindings are which are made of metals. yes, ionic
No, but the bond in sodium chloride is covalent.