Rubidium iodide is an ionic compound.
Yes, as would be expected from the fact that the electronegativity of chlorine is much greater than that of rubidium.
Yes!
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
Rubidium (an alkali metal) does not form compounds or ionic bonds with calcium (an alkaline earth metal). The two each form compounds with several of the same elements (e.g. chloride, carbonate, nitrate).
Rubidium iodide
Calcium chloride is an ionic compound.
Rb2S====
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
Rubidium (an alkali metal) does not form compounds or ionic bonds with calcium (an alkaline earth metal). The two each form compounds with several of the same elements (e.g. chloride, carbonate, nitrate).
Rubidium iodide
Calcium chloride is an ionic compound.
Rb2S====
Rubidium hydroxide is an ionic compound.
Magnesium chloride is a compound, not a bond of any kind. The compound is ionic.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is an ionic compound.
If you think to rubidium bromide (RbBr) this compound is ionic.
No Its an ionic compound
Strontium chloride is an ionic compound.
I think KCI ionic compound name is Potassium Chloride.