ionic
The products are 1-chlorobutane and 2-chlorobutane.
The 2-Carbon in 2-chlorobutane has 4 different substituent groups attached to it (Cl, CH3, H, CH2CH3) and hence is a chiral Carbon. There are no Carbon atoms in 1-chlorobutane which have 4 different substituent groups attached and hence is not optically active.
The reaction between butane (C₄H₁₀) and chlorine (Cl₂) is a free radical halogenation reaction. This reaction can result in the substitution of one or more hydrogen atoms on the butane molecule with chlorine atoms, leading to the formation of different chlorinated butane derivatives. The specific equation will depend on the conditions of the reaction and the extent of substitution desired.
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
Yes, chlorine trifluoride (ClF3) does have a dative bond. The bond between the chlorine atom and one of the fluorine atoms is a dative bond, where both electrons in the bond come from the chlorine atom.
Yes. a covalent bond is formed between carbon and chlorine.
Covalent. Non-metals tend to share electrons
The bond formed between iron and chlorine is an ionic bond. In this bond, iron loses electrons to chlorine, resulting in the formation of positively charged iron ions and negatively charged chlorine ions that are attracted to each other.
The chemical bond between chlorine and hydrogen is polar covalent.
ionic bond between Na+ ions and Cl- ions
The bond formed by chlorine is a single bond- e.g. in Cl2, in HCl
The reaction of 1-chlorobutane with sodium ethoxide results in an SN2 reaction, leading to the substitution of the chlorine atom with an ethoxy group. This forms 1-butanol as the main product.