Iodine I2 is covalently bonded and the bond is non polar as the atoms at both ends are identical
Iodine is a non polar covalent present in all phases as I2
Non-polar because Iodine is evenly 'distributed' or the molecule's angles are 180 degrees, and since there is equal pull from each iodine, and no lone pairs, the answer is nonpolar.
Iodine molecules containing two atoms of iodine (I2) each are non-polar.
IBr iodine monbromide is covalent- and the electronegativity difference is small- so nonpolar
It's ionic, not polar
Iodine is a non polar covalent present in all phases as I2
Non-polar because Iodine is evenly 'distributed' or the molecule's angles are 180 degrees, and since there is equal pull from each iodine, and no lone pairs, the answer is nonpolar.
Iodine molecules containing two atoms of iodine (I2) each are non-polar.
IBr iodine monbromide is covalent- and the electronegativity difference is small- so nonpolar
It's ionic, not polar
Polar!
Iodine is not soluble in water because iodine is nonpolar and water is polar. According to the "Like dissolve like" expression, nonpolar substances are soluble with nonpolar substances and polar substances are soluble with polar substances, but nonpolar substances are not soluble with polar substances.
CCl4 is nonpolar.
Its ionic
Be and Cl form an ionic bond (BeCl2), and it is polar.
An iodine molecule is formed by two 'I' atoms. It implies that the molecule is symmetrical and it is non-polar.
Silver chloride is ionic.