No. It is ionic because the electronegativity difference is greater than 1.7 (2.3).
MgO is magnesium oxide so it is an ionic bond.
No. It is ionic because the electronegativity difference is greater than 1.7 (2.3).
MgO is ionic not polar covalent.
the type of bond in MgO is Manganese(ii)sulphate
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.
MgO is magnesium oxide so it is an ionic bond.
HF and CN- have covalent bonds.
No. It is ionic because the electronegativity difference is greater than 1.7 (2.3).
MgO is ionic not polar covalent.
the type of bond in MgO is Manganese(ii)sulphate
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.
The type of bond in which two atoms share electrons is called a covalent bond.
Yes, a peptide bond is a covalent bond.
covalent bond,coordinate bond and singlet bond
Covalent Bond .
covalent
nonpolar covalent bond