suck my balls
Ocean water is considered a mixture of both ionic and covalent compounds. It contains mainly ionic compounds such as sodium chloride (table salt), but also some covalent compounds like dissolved oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Silicon compounds can exhibit both ionic and covalent bonding. Compounds such as silicon dioxide (SiO2) have a covalent structure, while compounds like silicon carbide (SiC) can have more ionic character. The nature of bonding in silicon compounds depends on the electronegativity difference between silicon and the other elements involved.
Water can dissolve some ionic compounds as well as some molecular compounds because of its polarity. It is polar enough to dissolve ionic compounds into their ions. Water does not dissolve molecular compounds by breaking covalent bonds, but through intermolecular forces.
Ionic compounds generally have higher melting and boiling points.
Almost all molten covalent compounds are much worseconductors than almost any molten ionic compounds. However, note that some ionic compounds contain covalently bonded polyatomic ions, and many of these can conduct electricity as well as most other ions in a melt.
Covalent bonds are formed when electrons are shared, and ionic bonds are formed by electrostatic forces between bonds. Ionic bonds are generally weaker than covalent bonds, since most ions dissociate in water, but covalent compounds do not break into their elements unless with large amounts of energy added.
amphoteric
No. There is no such thing as an "ionic bonded molecule," as molecules, by definition, are helld together by covalent bonds. Ionic compounds are not molecular. Some ionic compounds disassociated in water while others do not.
Milk is a complex mixture of substances, so the question is meaningless. It can only be answered for a pure compound. Water makes up most of milk, and that is covalent, as are most of the substances in it, but there are some ionic ones too.
Sulfur typically forms covalent bonds in most of its compounds, including hydrogen sulfide (H2S) and sulfur dioxide (SO2). However, in some cases, sulfur can also form ionic bonds, such as in compounds like sodium sulfide (Na2S).
Plutonium can exist in multiple oxidation states, leading to the formation of both ionic and covalent compounds. In some compounds, plutonium can form ionic bonds by donating or accepting electrons to achieve a stable electronic configuration.
Soluble ionic compounds like NaCl, and some covalent compounds like HCl(g) which will dissociate in water.