Covalent
No, diphosphorus trioxide (P2O3) is a covalent compound, not ionic. This is because it is composed of nonmetals (phosphorus and oxygen), which typically form covalent bonds by sharing electrons.
Dinitrogen trioxide is a covalent compound. It is composed of nonmetal elements (nitrogen) which typically form covalent bonds by sharing electrons.
Dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3) has a covalent bond. It is formed by the sharing of electrons between nitrogen atoms.
Sulfur trioxide is a covalent compound. It consists of non-metal elements (sulfur and oxygen) that share electrons to form bonds, rather than transferring them as in ionic compounds.
Dinitrogen trioxide is a covalent compound. It is composed of two nitrogen atoms covalently bonded to three oxygen atoms.
Covalent
No, diphosphorus trioxide (P2O3) is a covalent compound, not ionic. This is because it is composed of nonmetals (phosphorus and oxygen), which typically form covalent bonds by sharing electrons.
Dinitrogen trioxide is a covalent compound. It is composed of nonmetal elements (nitrogen) which typically form covalent bonds by sharing electrons.
Dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3) has a covalent bond. It is formed by the sharing of electrons between nitrogen atoms.
Sulfur trioxide is a covalent compound. It consists of non-metal elements (sulfur and oxygen) that share electrons to form bonds, rather than transferring them as in ionic compounds.
Dinitrogen trioxide is a covalent compound. It is composed of two nitrogen atoms covalently bonded to three oxygen atoms.
Diphosphorus trioxide is covalent. It consists of nonmetal elements (phosphorus and oxygen) bonded together by sharing electrons, typical of covalent compounds.
Sulfur trioxide is not ionic; it is covalently bonded. When dissolved in water, however, sulfur trioxide forms sulfuric acid, which is partially ionic: It dissociates into hydrogen ions and sulfate polyatomic cations.
Yes, P3O6 (phosphorus trioxide) is covalent, not ionic, because it is composed of nonmetals.
Xenon trioxide is a covalent compound. It consists of xenon bonded covalently to three oxygen atoms through sharing of electrons.
Dinitrogen trioxide has a covalent bond. It is composed of two nitrogen atoms and three oxygen atoms that share electrons to form stable molecules, rather than transferring electrons, which is characteristic of ionic bonds.
It is a molecular (covalent) compound. Present day text books refer to a covalent compound as a molecular compound, as opposed to an ionic one.