Sodium is a metal and Chloride is a non-metal, so ionic.
No; it's an ionic compound.
Only in the acid (-COOH) and hydroxy (=C-O-H) group the bonds are polar, all others are covalent.
This is an ionic compound, for example a salt as potassium chloride.
B. binary ionic compound
No, salt is not always an ionic compound. It can be an ionic compound, like sodium chloride (NaCl), but it can also be a covalent compound, like sodium acetate (CH3COONa). The classification of salt as ionic or covalent depends on the elements involved and their bonding.
salt - ionic compoundwater - covalent polar compoundsalt water - solution
An ionic compound can be either salt or sugar. Table salt (sodium chloride) is a common example of an ionic compound that is a salt, while table sugar (sucrose) is a covalent compound. Both salt and sugar can consist of ions, but they have different chemical compositions and structures.
No. Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) is a salt, and it is bonded ionically.
Salt, sodium chloride (NaCl), is actually an ionic compound, not a polar covalent compound. Ionic compounds form when a metal donates an electron to a nonmetal, resulting in an electrostatic bond between oppositely charged ions. In the case of salt, sodium loses an electron to chlorine, creating Na+ and Cl- ions held together by ionic bonds.
although there are covalent bonds in the ammonium ion and also the sulfate ion - the compound as a whole is a salt and is ionic
This is a covalent compound. S-Cl bond is covalent.
The name of the covalent compound N2O5 is Dinitrogen Pentoxide. N2O5 is a rare example of a compound that adopts two structures depending on the conditions: most commonly it is a salt, but under some conditions it is a polar molecule: N2O5 ⇌ [NO2+][NO3−]