Strontium bromide is an ionic compound.
It's an ionic bond.
It is a covalent compound.
It has ionic bonds.
It forms an ionic bond
ionic
I have on idea
Strontium chloride is an ionic compound.
"It is ionic" but with covalent properties, due to the electro negativities of the two ions.
The two main types of chemical bonds are ionic and covalent.
Ionic bonds. This is because strontium is a metal while iodine is a non metal. The difference of electronegativities between them is higher than 1.7.
The bonds are ionic or covalent.
Strontium chloride is an ionic compound.
Ionic
Covalent
GaCl3 is covalent. It is dimer Ga2Cl6 with chlorine bridges, Cl2GaCl2GaCl2
It is ionic as are all strontium compounds.
No, it is non-polar.
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
Hydrogen Chloride (the gas) has covalent bonds, but Hydrochloric acid forms ionic bonds. As to why this occurs, I am clueless
chlorides are ionic bonds. so lithium chloride is ionic.
"It is ionic" but with covalent properties, due to the electro negativities of the two ions.
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.
Titanium tetrachloride has ionic bonds.