Aluminum chloride
Iron (lll) oxide
yes, but not all salts are binary ionic compounds
Type 1 binary ionic compounds are those in which the cation has only one form, or charge. Type 2 binary ionic compounds are those in which the cation can have multiple forms.
No. Ionic compounds are held together by ionic bonds.
Metals and nonmetal ions, Compounds with very different electronegativities
false
yes, but not all salts are binary ionic compounds
Type 1 binary ionic compounds are those in which the cation has only one form, or charge. Type 2 binary ionic compounds are those in which the cation can have multiple forms.
No. Ionic compounds are held together by ionic bonds.
Metals and nonmetal ions, Compounds with very different electronegativities
false
Binary ionic compounds are named by writing the name of the action, followed by the name of the anion. Potassium bromide is an example of an ionic compound.
It is true of binary ionic compounds but not necessarily of compounds containing polyatomic ions.
Cross drop reduce
Binary ionic compounds have 2 elements, the element on the left (cation) should be a metal (left side of the zig zag line), and the other element on the right should be nonmetal (right side of the zig zag line)Binary molecular compounds have 2 NON METAL elements
No. Not all binary compounds are ionic and not all ionic compounds are binary. An ionic compound is a compound formed by the exchange rather than the sharing of electrons. A binary compound is any compound of exactly 2 elements. Examples: Sodium chloride (NaCl, compound sodium and chlorine) is both binary and ionic. Potassium hydroxide (KOH, compound of potassium, hydrogen, and oxygen) is ionic but not binary. Water (H2O, compound of hydrogen and oxygen) is binary, but covalent, not ionic.
"-ide"
True