Covalent
Dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3) has a covalent bond. It is formed by the sharing of electrons between nitrogen atoms.
Dinitrogen trisulfide is an ionic bond.
covalent
SO3 forms a covalent bond. In sulfur trioxide (SO3), the sulfur and oxygen atoms share electrons to form covalent bonds, where electrons are shared between atoms to complete their outer electron shells.
I had this same question; because dinitrogen tetroxide has 2 Nitrogen & oxygen atoms, I wrote that it is covalent. My reasoning was that it doesn't combine negative and positive charges, both nitrogen and oxygen have negative charges.
Dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3) has a covalent bond. It is formed by the sharing of electrons between nitrogen atoms.
It doesn't N2O4 is a covalent compound
Di-nitrogen tri-oxide is this compound's name.
Yes, N2O3 (dinitrogen trioxide) is a covalent compound. It is made up of nonmetals nitrogen and oxygen, which typically form covalent bonds by sharing electrons.
covalent b/c they are both nonmetals. A covalent bond is between two elements on the right side of the periodic table, an ionic bond is between the left and right side.
Dinitrogen trisulfide is an ionic bond.
covalent
SO3 forms a covalent bond. In sulfur trioxide (SO3), the sulfur and oxygen atoms share electrons to form covalent bonds, where electrons are shared between atoms to complete their outer electron shells.
I had this same question; because dinitrogen tetroxide has 2 Nitrogen & oxygen atoms, I wrote that it is covalent. My reasoning was that it doesn't combine negative and positive charges, both nitrogen and oxygen have negative charges.
covalent
NO is covalent.
NO is covalent.