Carbon tetrahydride is an unusual name for methane. Because carbon and hydrogen have similar electronegativities the bond between C-H is covalent.
CH4, methane is covalently bonded
carbon tetrachloride is a molecular compound
Carbon dioxide is a molecule.
The formula for carbon tetrahydride is CH4This is because there is one carbon atom ans four hydrogen atoms (Tetra means 'four'). Therefore, when combined, it forms carbon tetrahydride.
Carbon tetrahydride is an unusual name for methane. Because carbon and hydrogen have similar electronegativities the bond between C-H is covalent.
CH4, methane is covalently bonded
carbon tetrachloride is a molecular compound
Carbon dioxide is a molecule.
The formula for carbon tetrahydride is CH4This is because there is one carbon atom ans four hydrogen atoms (Tetra means 'four'). Therefore, when combined, it forms carbon tetrahydride.
Carbon dioxide is a covalent molecule.
Since carbon monoxide is not an ionic compound it technically doesn't have an ionic formula. The molecular formula for carbon monoxide is CO
No, Carbon tetrabromide is a binary molecular compound.
No, it is covalent (molecular)
it is an ionic compound. (but it has covalent bond between carbon and oxygen in the carbonate anion)
As both carbon and oxygen are non-metals, they bond together with covalent bonds forming molecules of carbon dioxide CO2, and hence carbon dioxide is a molecular compound.another person say's: in easier words, Carbon-oxide is a molecular. (non-ionic)
CH4(aka "methane")