It is an ionic molecule because it is composed of a cation and anion.
KMnO4 is an ionic compound highly soluble in water, KMnO4 = K+ + MnO4- but with in permanganate ion Manganese and oxygen have covalent bonds.
I'say potassium nitride is ionic as most soluble salt are.
= Ionic =
ionic!
Potassium sulfate is an ionic compound.
Ionic because the compound contains potassium (metal) and oxygen/hydrogen (non-metals) :)
Yes, I believe it is! It looks like Potassium nitrite. An ionic compound is basically one of these four forms: 1) a metal+ a nonmetal 2) a metal+ a polyatomic anion 3) a polyatomic cation+ a nonmetal 4) 2 polyatomic ions (of opp. charges) Hope this helps! :D
No. Potassium chloride is ionic, not molecular. An ionic compound, though, can be though of as polar.
Yes. Sodium permanganate is an ionic compound comprising mono-atomic sodium cations and polyatomic permanganate anions.
Potassium permanganate is a polar compound. This is a salt that has an ionic formula and being polar refers to the type of molecules that are in a compound.
Potassium sulfate is an ionic compound.
Iron and Potassium both are elements and not compounds. They can't be ionic or molecular.
More correct KCl is the formula unit of potassium chloride.
No, like all potassium compounds potassium iodide is ionic.
Ionic because the compound contains potassium (metal) and oxygen/hydrogen (non-metals) :)
Yes, I believe it is! It looks like Potassium nitrite. An ionic compound is basically one of these four forms: 1) a metal+ a nonmetal 2) a metal+ a polyatomic anion 3) a polyatomic cation+ a nonmetal 4) 2 polyatomic ions (of opp. charges) Hope this helps! :D
Yes, potassium sulfide is a molecular compound.
No. Potassium chloride is ionic, not molecular. An ionic compound, though, can be though of as polar.
Yes. Sodium permanganate is an ionic compound comprising mono-atomic sodium cations and polyatomic permanganate anions.
Ammonia is a molecular compound and not ionic.
It's Calcium Permanganate. Ca = Calcium Ionic compound MnO42 = Permanganate There should be parentheses around the ionic compound (after the 4) - Ca(MnO4)2