Phosphorus - covalent network Argon - covalent molecular
covalent
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
Phosphorus is a nonmetallic element so phosphorus-phosphorus bonds are covalent.
Phosphorus can, in fact, exist as covalent crystals in the solid state. Phosphorus usually exists in the solid state as non-covalent crystals. Under intense pressure, however, the bonds can become covalent.
Phosphorus - covalent network Argon - covalent molecular
Covalent
covalent
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
Yes. Nitrogen and phosphorus would form a covalent bond.
Phosphorus is a nonmetallic element so phosphorus-phosphorus bonds are covalent.
Phosphorus can, in fact, exist as covalent crystals in the solid state. Phosphorus usually exists in the solid state as non-covalent crystals. Under intense pressure, however, the bonds can become covalent.
Phosphorous trisulfide (PS3) is a covalent compound.
Phosphorus is a chemical element, not a compound.
Yes
Nitrogen and fluorine are both nonmetals so that makes the bond a covalent bond. It's not hard.
The oxides of phosphorus are covalent. There are no ionic charges.