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Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
ionic
Phosphorus pentafluoride is covalent
Phosphorus is a nonmetallic element so phosphorus-phosphorus bonds are covalent.
Ionic. Strontium is a metal and Iodine is a nonmetal.
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
ionic
It is not ionic, it is covalent.
covalent bond
Phosphorus pentafluoride is covalent
Phosphorus is a nonmetallic element so phosphorus-phosphorus bonds are covalent.
Ionic. Strontium is a metal and Iodine is a nonmetal.
An ionic bond - sodium and iodine form NaI, containing Na+ and I- ions.
Boron and Iodine are elements but in a reaction they would form neither as a covaelent bond and an ionic bond is comepletely separate.Basically, neither can form copounds as covaelent and ionic are bonds not compounds.
Polar bond between H and I in HI
According to two Wikipedia articles, phosphorus and iodine can form phosphorus triiodide (PI3) and diphosphorus tetraiodide (P2I4). These compounds are made from the covalent bonding between the phosphorus and iodine atoms. Nonmetals tend to form covalent bonds with other nonmetals.
No. Carbon does not form ionic bonds, and in this case they are double-covalent bonds.