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No. An ionic bond is a bond between a metal and a nonmetal. Since oxygen and nitrogen are both nonmetals, they form a covalent bond.
Nitrogen triiodide? Sure is! Nonmetal to nonmetal, but I am too lazy tonight ( I have a cold ) to see what the electronegativity variance is, so polar or not I do not know. I will assume nonpolar.
Well, the bond between carbon and nitrogen is covalent, whilst the bond between potassium and the cyanide is ionic.
It is ionic
No, it is not a covalent bond. It is an Ionic bond.
covalent
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.
Covalent Bond.
The bond is covalent.
No. An ionic bond is a bond between a metal and a nonmetal. Since oxygen and nitrogen are both nonmetals, they form a covalent bond.
Nitrogen triiodide? Sure is! Nonmetal to nonmetal, but I am too lazy tonight ( I have a cold ) to see what the electronegativity variance is, so polar or not I do not know. I will assume nonpolar.
no. they will form covalent bond
No. The bond is polar covalent not ionic.
Well, the bond between carbon and nitrogen is covalent, whilst the bond between potassium and the cyanide is ionic.
covalent bond because two electrons are shared
Well, the bond between carbon and nitrogen is covalent, whilst the bond between potassium and the cyanide is ionic.
In an ionic bond, one of the elements is a metal, the other a non metal. Sodium is underneath the classification of "alkali metals", whilst Nitrogen is a non metal. Therefore, the bond between these two elements is ionic. The formula would be Na3N. Thanks. Very helpful.