Carbon monoxide exhibits covalent bonding.
One carbon atom and one oxygen atom are connected by a triple bond that consists of two covalent bonds and one dative covalent bond.
No, however, heated carbon monoxide will readily bond with oxygen to remove it from ores but it not "flammable".
Polar Covalent
The bond strength for carbon monoxide (triple bond) is about 1070 kJ/m (see Wickipedia and http://www.wissensdrang.com/auf1cb2.htm). This is a very high bond strength--even greater than that for the triple bond in molecular nitrogen.However, carbon monoxide is more reactive than nitrogen (see http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/Strasse/6671/n2/n2.html). That is a different issue.
Sodium monoxide has ionic bonds.
Carbon monoxide exhibits covalent bonding.
Carbon monoxide is held together by a covalent bond.
This is the monoxide of N. There are covalent bonds.
A molecule of carbon monoxide has polar covalent bonds.
Lead Monoxide is a covalent bond because lead is a metal and oxygen is a nonmetal. A covalent bond is between a metal (like lead) and a nonmetal (like oxygen).
Blood
covalent bonding
Yes. CO (carbon monoxide) has a polar covalent bond.
One carbon atom and one oxygen atom are connected by a triple bond that consists of two covalent bonds and one dative covalent bond.
No, however, heated carbon monoxide will readily bond with oxygen to remove it from ores but it not "flammable".
First, a coordinate bond IS a covalent bond, but one in which both electrons are provided by one element. In nitrogen monoxide (NO), there is a double bond between N and O, such as in N=O and each element contributes 2 electrons to this, so it would be considered a coordinate bond.