No. Titanium is an element, not a compound. Like other metals, it is held together by metallic bonds, which are different from covalent and ionic bonds.
Titanium dioxide is a covalent compound. It is made up of covalent bonds between titanium and oxygen atoms.
Titanium dioxide is not an ionic compound, as it is a covalent compound. In titanium dioxide, titanium forms covalent bonds with oxygen atoms. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms, rather than the transfer of electrons seen in ionic bonds.
Titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4) is a covalent compound, not a giant ionic compound. It is composed of covalent bonds between the titanium and chlorine atoms, rather than the transfer of electrons between a metal and a nonmetal as seen in ionic compounds.
Titanium(IV) Sulfate is an ionic compound.
Titanium oxide is an ionic compound. Titanium is a transition metal that typically forms cations, while oxygen is a nonmetal that forms anions. In titanium oxide, the titanium cations and oxide anions are held together by ionic bonds.
No, Titanium Dioxide is a covalent compound. Ionic bonding generally occurs only between specific commonly known ionic molecules. Lists can be found online in various locations by searching for "common ions". These ions generally have special names, and don't follow the systematic naming scheme that Titanium Dioxide does. Outside of these few dozen ions, most other molecular bonds are covalent.
TiCl4 is a covalent compound. Titanium (Ti) and chlorine (Cl) are both nonmetals, so they share electrons to form covalent bonds rather than transferring them to form ionic bonds.
Titanium tetrachloride has ionic bonds.
This is a covalent compound. S-Cl bond is covalent.
Titanium is an element.
Out of the compounds listed, only TiO2 (titanium dioxide) is an ionic compound. The others are molecular compounds. TiO2 is composed of a metal (titanium) and a nonmetal (oxygen), resulting in an ionic bond between them.
Does not compute, rephrase the question.