It is a covalent compound
pretty much all are covalent bonds, C-C is covalent bond, C-H, C-O, C=C, C~C, C-N, C=N, C~N are all covalent bonds. Most polymers have just a carbon backbone, thus covalent. I can not think of an ionic bonded polymer, some of the regents used to make polymers can be ionic like salts, but the final chain of mers is covalent, typically non-polar.
Covalent bonds: C-H and C-C Polar covalent bonds: C-O and O-H Ionic bonds: None
The bonds in CCl4 are polar covalent.
CO (Carbon Monoxide) is covalent.
covalent - both C and O are non-metals, and the electronegativity difference is not sufficient to form an ionic bond.
pretty much all are covalent bonds, C-C is covalent bond, C-H, C-O, C=C, C~C, C-N, C=N, C~N are all covalent bonds. Most polymers have just a carbon backbone, thus covalent. I can not think of an ionic bonded polymer, some of the regents used to make polymers can be ionic like salts, but the final chain of mers is covalent, typically non-polar.
Covalent bonds: C-H and C-C Polar covalent bonds: C-O and O-H Ionic bonds: None
The bonds in CCl4 are polar covalent.
CO (Carbon Monoxide) is covalent.
covalent - both C and O are non-metals, and the electronegativity difference is not sufficient to form an ionic bond.
Vitamin C is scientifically known as ascorbic acid. As far as I am aware, there are no metals present, consequently, it isn't ionic - it's covalent.
ionic ZnCl2 is quite covalent: mp 275 °C
Covalent- the small difference in electronegativity is the reason.
C-H is a covalent bond because the electronegativity varies by less than 0.5 units
Typically carbon forms a covalent, not ionic bond.
This is an ionic compound.
ionic