No
Covalent - Acids don't have metals in them, so they have covalent bonds.
Yes that is all it contains there for it to be ionic or metallic the bond would have to have a metal for ionic and more than 2 elements for metallic composed of metals
Well an Ionic bond is between a metal and a non metal, and Covalent bonds are between non metals, so yeah this is a covalent bond, where the particles share electrons, because Carbon, Oxygen and Hydrogen are non metals. No charges to worry about either! Much easier
It is not possible for the polar covalent compound to have a lower melting point than the non-polar covalent compound because they have ionic bonds.
Cl2O3 is a covalent compound.
Yes, it is possible.
Yes, it is possible.
No. The difference in electronegativity is too great.
polar bonds are non metals bonded to non metals and non polar covalent bonds are bonds sharing electrons.....
Covalent - Acids don't have metals in them, so they have covalent bonds.
Yes that is all it contains there for it to be ionic or metallic the bond would have to have a metal for ionic and more than 2 elements for metallic composed of metals
Covalent bonds, polar or non-polar
Well an Ionic bond is between a metal and a non metal, and Covalent bonds are between non metals, so yeah this is a covalent bond, where the particles share electrons, because Carbon, Oxygen and Hydrogen are non metals. No charges to worry about either! Much easier
It is not possible for the polar covalent compound to have a lower melting point than the non-polar covalent compound because they have ionic bonds.
Cl2O3 is a covalent compound.
Covalent bonds, polar or non-polar
Iodide compounds with alkali metals are considered ionic- but because of the electronegativity of Iodine, 2.66, some metals such as gallium bond to iodine with polar covalent bonds. Organic iodes such as methyl iodide, ethyl iodide are covalently bonded, (polar covalent)