Depends on the compound; chlorine can form an ionic bond with many elements. eg, NaCl, MgCl2, CsCl.
Definitely not! Chlorhexidine is organic and covalently bonded while sodium chloride is inorganic and ionically bonded.
NaCl, an ionically bonded compound named "sodium chloride".
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is an example of a molecule that is chemically determined to be ionically bonded with a small number of atoms. It consists of one sodium ion and one chloride ion, held together by strong electrostatic forces.
The chemical formula for calcium chloride is CaCl2 - Ca++ ionically bonded with 2 Cl-.
NaCl is ionic, but it is not a molecule. Molecules can only be covalent.
D. Ammonium chloride contains both ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between ammonium (NH4+) and chloride (Cl-) ions is ionic, while the bonds within the ammonium ion (hydrogen and nitrogen atoms) are covalent.
The same atoms bonded together are elements. Different atoms bonded together are compounds. Oxygen gas, O2, is an element composed of molecules of two oxygen atoms covalently bonded. Water, H2O is a molecular compound composed of two hydrogen and one oxygen atoms covalently bonded. Common table salt, NaCl, is an ionic compound composed of sodium and chloride ions ionically bonded.
Since potassium iodide is ionically bonded, it does not technically have a molecular formula. The corresponding characteristic for ionically bonded compounds is a "formula unit", and for potassium iodide, this is KI
It is a compound: NaCl-sodium [an element] bonded to chloride [an element].
its a compound consisting of calcium ionically bonded to bromine
Ionically bonded compounds.
The compound is magnesium chloride, an ionically bonded solid at standard temperature and pressure, with formula MgCl2.