No, generally it is ionic.
== It is said that when the two non-metals combine a covalent bond will formed.metal - metal = metallicmetal - nonmetal = ionicnonmetal - nonmetal = covalent ==
Cesium is a metal and fluorine is a nonmetal. When a metal and nonmetal bond, they form an ionic bond.
Lead Monoxide is a covalent bond because lead is a metal and oxygen is a nonmetal. A covalent bond is between a metal (like lead) and a nonmetal (like oxygen).
Various things. If it is a nonmetal and nonmetal it going to be a covalent bond. If it is a metal and nonmetal it is going to be an ionic bond. If it is a metal and metal then it is a metallic bond.
No, the combination of a nonmetal with a metal produces an ionic bond.
== It is said that when the two non-metals combine a covalent bond will formed.metal - metal = metallicmetal - nonmetal = ionicnonmetal - nonmetal = covalent ==
ionic bond conects a nonmetal and a metal. covalent bond connects a nonmetal and another nonmetal.
Cesium is a metal and fluorine is a nonmetal. When a metal and nonmetal bond, they form an ionic bond.
covalent bond
Lead Monoxide is a covalent bond because lead is a metal and oxygen is a nonmetal. A covalent bond is between a metal (like lead) and a nonmetal (like oxygen).
Various things. If it is a nonmetal and nonmetal it going to be a covalent bond. If it is a metal and nonmetal it is going to be an ionic bond. If it is a metal and metal then it is a metallic bond.
No, the combination of a nonmetal with a metal produces an ionic bond.
Ionic bond is specific for metal-nonmetal combinations.
PI3 is a non metal. Bond Type is Covalent.
Usually a metal bonded and a nonmetal form an ionic bond. There are some exceptions, such as BeCl2, which has covalent bonds.
Manganese oxide is an ionic compound because there is a metal and nonmetal a covalent bond would be two nonmetals bonded together
a covalent bond is a bond between two nonmetals. the electrons are "shared" between the two atoms. example: H2O. an ionic bond forms between a metal and nonmetal. in an ionic bond, the electrons aren't shared, but are transferred from the metal to the nonmetal, leaving the metal with a positive charge and the nonmetal with a negative charge. examples: MgO, NaCl.