It depends on the rule you use to classify it. Magnesium Sulfide is ionic, if using the metal-nonmetal rule. It is polar covalent, if using the 1.7 electronegativity difference rule. Both these rules are generalizations.
Magnesium is a metal, and sulphur is a non-metal, so the resulting compound has to be ionic, given by the chemical formula Mg3S.
Magnesium sulfate has ionic bonds between magnesium cations and sulfate anions and has covalent bonds within the polyatomic sulfate ions.
Ionic
IONIC!
ionic
Yes. Magnesium sulfide is an ionic compound.
Magnesium chloride is a compound, not a bond of any kind. The compound is ionic.
The compound is ionic because Mg (magnesium) is a metal and S (sulfur) is a non metal with a relatively high electro-negativity.MgS [note correct letter cases] has ionic bonds.
K2S or potassium sulfide is an ionic compound.
Magnesium chloride is an ionic compound.
Yes. Magnesium sulfide is an ionic compound.
Zinc sulfide is a covalent compound.
Magnesium Sulfide ionic bond
Magnesium chloride is a compound, not a bond of any kind. The compound is ionic.
K2S or potassium sulfide is an ionic compound.
The compound is ionic because Mg (magnesium) is a metal and S (sulfur) is a non metal with a relatively high electro-negativity.MgS [note correct letter cases] has ionic bonds.
Magnesium chloride is an ionic compound.
no. it only has ionic as far as i know.
MgS Magnesium Sulfide is ionic [citation reqd] MgSO4 is definitely ionic
Mg is the scientific symbol for the element magnesium :)
MgO is an ionic white solid.
Na2O is ionic and consists of Na+ and O2- ions.