Covalent. There is no electronegativity difference between two atoms of the same element.
The bond formed between two chlorine atoms is completely covalent.
convalent bond
covalent
If it bonds with another nonmetal, it will create a covalent bond. If it bonds with a metal, it will create an ionic bond.
it will form a ionic bond
Ionic
It is not ionic, it is covalent.
pure covalent; ionic
There is no such thing as CI2 However, Cl2 is elemental chlorine, which is covalently bonded to form diatomic molecules.
It is ionic
No, it is not a covalent bond. It is an Ionic bond.
The answer i believe is Non-polar Covalent.
YesCl2O is covalent
"I believe it is Ionic." Whoever said this is wrong, it's covalent (they share an electron from each atom to stabillise themselves) with an instantaneous dipole induced dipole intermolecular force.
covalent
Chlorine gas (Cl2) is covalent.
Cl2
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.
covalent