NaCl is ionic.
KBr APEX:)
NaCl (table salt, an ionic compound) CO2 (carbon dioxide, a covalently bonded compound)
CuO + CO2 -> CuCO3 CuO is copper oxide and is an ionic bond Cu(2+) and O(2-) CuCO3 is also an ionic bond, as one oxygen from copper oxide has joined with the covalently bonded carbon dioxide, CO2, to form carbonate, a polyatomic ion. Cu(2+) and CO3(2-)
Only in CO2
Ionic compounds occur between atoms of a metal and a non-metal therefore: CO2 would not, SrCl2 would, H2S would not and SO2 would not. Only SrCl2 would be an ionic compound.
KBr APEX:)
NaCl (table salt, an ionic compound) CO2 (carbon dioxide, a covalently bonded compound)
CO2
examples of molecules: H2O- water, has a polar covalent bond NaCl- salt, has an ionic bond CO2-carbon dioxide thanks for listening and goodnight. Over and out!
CO2 is a covalently bonded compound, taking the form of O=C=O, with two pairs of electrons on each oxygen atom. Ionic compounds involve ionic bonds, such as that of NaCl (Na+ and Cl-).
No it is covalent bonding
CuO + CO2 -> CuCO3 CuO is copper oxide and is an ionic bond Cu(2+) and O(2-) CuCO3 is also an ionic bond, as one oxygen from copper oxide has joined with the covalently bonded carbon dioxide, CO2, to form carbonate, a polyatomic ion. Cu(2+) and CO3(2-)
h2o,Nacl,Co2,O2,O3
Only in CO2
Ionic compounds occur between atoms of a metal and a non-metal therefore: CO2 would not, SrCl2 would, H2S would not and SO2 would not. Only SrCl2 would be an ionic compound.
It is the same type of chemical bond that is found in organic compounds: the covalent bond. Also known as 'the sharing of a pair of electrons', it forms usually single, & sometimes double bonds, and rarely triple bonds {- as in the case of a "pair of combining trivalent Nitogen atoms" - i.e. N triple-bond-N - this represents 'the sharing of three pairs of electrons' by two Atoms!}
A molecule. You can have ionic or covalently bound atoms in a molecule. An example of ionic is NaCl, and of covalent is CO2