Covalent.
Iodine is a non polar covalent present in all phases as I2
Covalent. Iodine and fluorine are both nonmetals.
Ionic. Strontium is a metal and Iodine is a nonmetal.
Molecules can be ionic OR covalent, but not both. PbI2 (lead iodine), however, is ionic.
A solution of iodine is covalent.
It is not ionic, it is covalent.
ionic
Covalent.
Iodine is a non polar covalent present in all phases as I2
Preparation of iodine monochloride entails simply combining the halogens in a 1:1 molar ratio, according to the equation :- I2 + Cl2 → 2 ICl (iodine) + (chlorine) → (iodine monochloride)
Covalent. Iodine and fluorine are both nonmetals.
Ionic. Strontium is a metal and Iodine is a nonmetal.
Molecules can be ionic OR covalent, but not both. PbI2 (lead iodine), however, is ionic.
ICl
Iodine chloride is a covalent compound.
Boron and Iodine are elements but in a reaction they would form neither as a covaelent bond and an ionic bond is comepletely separate.Basically, neither can form copounds as covaelent and ionic are bonds not compounds.