Molecular
Molecular
Ionic, since it has silver (metal) and Sulfur (nonmetal).
Molecular Compound
Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
Molecular
Molecular
Molecular because it is between 2 non-metals.
SF6
Ionic, since it has silver (metal) and Sulfur (nonmetal).
Molecular Compound
When lithium and sulfur combine, they do so as Li2S (lithium sulfide). This is an ionic compound.
The formula of sulfur hexafluoride [note correct spelling] is SF6.
The formula of sulfur hexafluoride [note correct spelling] is SF6.
Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
It is a covalent: The sulfur "shares" an electron with each of the 6 fluorine atoms. The sulfur's outer shell is expanded and has 12 electrons. This website explains covalent boning and uses SF6 as an example. http:/sixthsense.osfc.ac.uk/chemistry/bonding/covalent.asp Good luck!
Sulfur is a chemical element.