sodium, Na, and potassium K
Ionic bonds.
Ions, charged atoms
No, ionic bonds are formed between atoms of different elements that have significantly different electronegativities. Identical atoms have the same electronegativities, so they do not form ionic bonds.
ionic
Ionic bonds
Ionic bonds
ionic or even covalent bonds
Lactose, a sugar molecule composed of glucose and galactose, does not typically form ionic bonds. Lactose is a covalent compound, meaning the atoms within the molecule share electrons to form bonds. Ionic bonds involve a transfer of electrons between atoms of different elements.
No, atoms of nonmetals do not lose protons when they form ionic bonds. Nonmetals tend to gain electrons to achieve a full outer shell, becoming negatively charged ions (anions) in ionic bonds.
The types of bonds are corporate bonds, junk bonds ,treasury bonds and municipal bonds. There are saving bonds also.
No, carbon usually forms covalent bonds rather than ionic bonds. Ionic bonds involve the transfer of electrons between atoms, while covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons. Carbon is more likely to share electrons with other atoms to complete its valence shell.
This is an ionic bond.