It will be weakly polar as a neutral compound, due to the presence of 1 unshared pair of electrons around the central xenon atom. (Additionally, the relatively large number of electrons in this compound will yield temporary dipoles in the form of dispersion forces.) If it's an ion, then I would need to know its charge. If its charge is +2 (meaning it has lost 2 electrons,) then that ion would be non-polar.
Xenon hexafluoride is a nonpolar compound.
Xenon hexaflouride is covalent.
No the bond is covalent in nature.
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
I think you mean the nitrate ion. Yes, that is a polyatomic ion with a negative charge. You write it as : NO3-
Copper is a single element so it is nonpolar. A polar substance forms when two or more elements with different electronegativities bond form a compound.
O2 , dioxygen has a non-polar covalent bond. With other elemnts, oxygen can form covalent bonds (generally polar) and ionic bonds as the O2- ion
the Xenon itself is an electron, so it doesn't have an ion charge
no nonpola in all ion .
It is Nonpolar
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
No a molecule is a molecule, polar or nonpolar.
The ion bromate is of course polar.
It is a polar molecule.
I think you mean the nitrate ion. Yes, that is a polyatomic ion with a negative charge. You write it as : NO3-
Copper is a single element so it is nonpolar. A polar substance forms when two or more elements with different electronegativities bond form a compound.
Xenon does not readily form an ion.
O2 , dioxygen has a non-polar covalent bond. With other elemnts, oxygen can form covalent bonds (generally polar) and ionic bonds as the O2- ion
The chlorate ion (ClO3-) is trigonal pyramidal and polar.
the Xenon itself is an electron, so it doesn't have an ion charge