It is soduim oxide I think and is ionic, ironic isn't it?
SO is the sulfur monooxide.
H2O is a covalent compound. As hydrogen has only one electron in its outer most shell and oxygen has six electrons in its last shell. Oxygen needs two, while hydrogen requires only one electron to complete its last octave. So oxygen form two covalent bond with two hydrogen atoms. So, water is a covalent compound, but as oxygen is second most electronegative element in the periodic table so due to its high electronegativity the bond no more remains pure covalent, but converted to polar covalent. Hence, water molecule is a polar covalent compound.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
This is a covalent compound.
No, it is covalent (molecular)
this an organic compound so it is covalent but acid is always covalent compound either organic or inorganic.
Yes, as there are no metals in this compound.
The compound is ethanol and is a covalent compound.
That compound is methanol and is a molecular compound. All bonds in this compound are covalent.
SO is the sulfur monooxide.
Only in the acid (-COOH) and hydroxy (=C-O-H) group the bonds are polar, all others are covalent.
Covalent compound
Yes. Dextrose does not dissociate in water, and therefore does not release ions.
This is a covalent compound. S-Cl bond is covalent.
TNT is a molecular compound.
It is a covalent compound.
a covalent compound has protons and electrons