A metal bonding with non-metals tend to form ionic bonds, a non-metal that bonds with another non-metal tend to form covalent bonds.
Ionic and covalent bonding involve electrons. Ionic bonding involves the loss and gain of electrons, form ions. Covalent bonding involves the sharing of electrons.
Covalent bonding involves the sharing of electrons. Ionic bonding involves the transfer of electrons.
In ionic bonding electron are transfer whereas in covalent bonding their is sharing of electron
Ionic
ionic
No, Covalent
Covalent bonding
In ionic bonding electrons are transferred from one element to another and are localised and not shared. the force of attraction in ionic bonding is electrostatic. In covalent bonding electrons are shared, or in some cases delocalised as in benzene. The source of the strength of a covalent bond is a quantum effect.
No it is covalent bonding
Covalent
ionic
Ionic bonding occurs between a metal and a nonmetal whereas covalent bonding occurs between two nonmetals.