polar covalent
No, chloroform is not ionic. It is a covalent compound consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and chlorine atoms.
When carbon reacts with chlorine, the result is a covalent compound, specifically, carbon tetrachloride. And of course, all sorts of organic compounds can be chlorinated by partial or complete replacement of hydrogen atoms by chlorine. But the compound will never be ionic.
No, methyl chloride is not an ionic compound. It is a covalent compound, meaning it is formed by sharing electrons between the carbon and hydrogen atoms in the methyl group, and the chlorine atom in the chloride group.
CH2Cl2, also known as dichloromethane or methylene chloride, is a non-ionic compound. It consists of covalent bonds between carbon, hydrogen, and chlorine atoms, meaning it does not dissociate into ions in solution. The molecule has polar characteristics due to the presence of electronegative chlorine atoms, but it does not exhibit ionic behavior.
Salol has both ionic and covalent bonds. It contains an ionic bond between the sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl) ions, and covalent bonds between the carbon (C) and hydrogen (H) atoms in the molecule.
Chloroform is a covalent compound. It is made up of covalent bonds formed between the carbon, hydrogen, and chlorine atoms in the molecule.
Ionic bonds occur between a Metal and a Non Metal, these elements are both non metals.
NaNO3 contains ionic bonds between Na+ and NO3-, while C2H3OH contains both covalent and ionic bonds due to the presence of both carbon-carbon and carbon-oxygen bonds; CH3Cl contains a covalent bond between carbon and chlorine; NH2OH has covalent bonds between nitrogen and hydrogen, as well as nitrogen and oxygen; H2O2 contains covalent bonds between hydrogen and oxygen; CH3C likely refers to CH3COOH (acetic acid), which contains covalent bonds between carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
Carbon tetrachloride is a covalent compound. It consists of covalent bonds between carbon and chlorine atoms rather than ionic bonds typically found in ionic compounds.
The compound formed when hydrogen and chlorine combine is hydrogen chloride, with formula HCl. In pure form, this compound has highly polar covalent bonds, but when dissolved in water, the compound ionizes.
HC1 is a covalent bond between hydrogen and chlorine. Each hydrogen atom shares its electron with the chlorine atom to form a stable molecule.
Carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) is a covalent compound. It consists of sharing of electrons between carbon and chlorine atoms, which is characteristic of covalent bonding.