Hydrogen gas is formed by air-born H2 molecules. Each H2 molecule consists of 2 hydrogen atoms, covalently bonded by overlapping 1s electron orbitals. So no, hydrogen gas is not an ionic bond, it is a covalent bond.
If you mean is the bond in hydrogen gas, H2 ionic then the answer is no.
Hydrogen gas (H2) is covalently (molecularly) bonded.
Hydrogen Chloride (the gas) has covalent bonds, but Hydrochloric acid forms ionic bonds. As to why this occurs, I am clueless
covalent Polar ionic is with a metal and non metaAnother answer:You have an Hydrogen Bond there.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen bond covalently.
If you mean is the bond in hydrogen gas, H2 ionic then the answer is no.
ionic bond!
Hydrogen gas (H2) is covalently (molecularly) bonded.
No, an ionic bond is considerably stronger than a hydrogen bond.
Salt has an ionic bond, not a hydrogen bond.
Hydrogen Chloride (the gas) has covalent bonds, but Hydrochloric acid forms ionic bonds. As to why this occurs, I am clueless
covalent Polar ionic is with a metal and non metaAnother answer:You have an Hydrogen Bond there.
No, hydrogen bonds are weak in comparison to both ionic and covalent bonds.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen bond covalently.
No. this is an example of ionic bond, not hydrogen bond
Covalent bond
Hydrogen is an element, not a bond. It can form bonds, which are usually covalent, but an ionic bond with hydrogen is possible, for example, lithium hydride is an ionic compound. While this, like every compound, does have its own distinctive features, I would not call it a special form of ionic bond.