Oxygen can form a compound with many elements, both metal and non-metals: * magnesium ------> MgO * copper -----> CuO * hydrogen -------> H2O * carbon ------> CO2
The bond is covalent.
The oxygen in the air is O2 and it has a covalent bond.
The bond order for the sulfur-oxygen bond in SO32- is 1.5.
Pure covalent because the electronegativity difference is 0
covalent bond
oxygen is an element on the Periodic Table of elements. This means that oxygen is an atom which could bond with another element covalently to form a molecule
The bond between oxygen atoms in gaseous oxygen is a covalent bond. In this type of bond, the atoms share electrons to form a stable molecule.
Oxygen is an element so it does not bond it is pure but if you join two oxygens they are covalent bonded
A covalent bond
Oxygen and fluorine are both non-metals which results in a covalent bond.
No, hydrogen and oxygen do not form an ionic bond. They typically form a covalent bond when they combine to make water (H2O). In this bond, they share electrons instead of transferring them.
It would've been easier if I could draw the structure or paste, but since it is not supported, I shall explain. One of the oxygen atoms is bonded to the nitrogen by a double bond. The second oxygen is bonded to the nitrogen and a hydrogen by single bonds. The last oxygen is bonded to the nitrogen by a coordinate bond.