Phosphorus is a chemical element, not a compound.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
This is a covalent compound.
It is an ionic compound.
Strontium bromide is an ionic compound.
No, it is covalent (molecular)
Phosphorous trisulfide (PS3) is a covalent compound.
Phosphorus pentafluoride is covalent
Phosphorus pentachloride is a covalent compound.
It is a molecular (covalent) compound. Present day text books refer to a covalent compound as a molecular compound, as opposed to an ionic one.
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent compound.
ionic = metal + nonmetal covalent = nonmetal + nonmetal So your compound is covalent because P (Phosphorus) is a nonmetal and O (oxygen) is a nonmetal.
covalent compounds is two nonmetals. example: phosphorus and oxygen are a covalent compound. ionic compounds is when you have a metal and a nonmetal or a metal and a polyatomic.
Phosphorus trichloride is a polar compound.
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
covalent
Covalent
Be3P2 Is an ionic compound made up of the group II metal beryllium, a cation is this compound and the nonmetal phosphorus, an anion is this compound. Be 2+ and P 3- combine ionicly to form Be3P2