Sodium bicarbonate is an ionic compound.
Magnesium chloride has an ionic bond.
Calcium and lithium individually are both elements with metallic bonding and not any of polar, covalent, or ionic bonding. They could be described as non covalent.
No. sulphur dioxide has polar covalent bond and is a polar covalent compound.
A covalent bond. Non-polar covalent is stronger than polar covalent as well.
Calcium hydroxide is ionic, and therefore polarity does not occur.
Sodium bicarbonate is ionic and would therefore be considered polar.
Sodium chloride is ionic.
No, it is extremely polar and in fact ionic.
Yes. Sodium chloride is a polar molecule.Take that last answer with a grain of .... If you are trying to decide whether or not the bond is ionic or polar covalent, I would choose ionic. The two atoms have very different electronegativities; the chlorine takes the electron from sodium, becoming Cl-, and leaving the sodium Na+.
Sodium bicarbonate is a polar molecule. The Sodium (NA+) creates a positive charge and the Bicarbonate (HCO3-) creates a negative charge. The attract each other creating a ionic bond.
it is ionic, soluble in polar solutes the reason it will not dissolve in water is dure to the nature of fluorides not wanting to let go of their cations
Polar Covalent
Temperature is proportional to solubility for sodium bicarbonate in water. Generally, adding heat increases solubility, as this input of energy helps break bonds.
polar covalent
Polar covalent. The difference in electronegtivity is insufficient for an ionic bond
Polar Covalent.
It is polar covalent, not ionic