the element that fluorine bonds with are nitrogen, oxygen, and many more
With difficulty but yes it does - particularly Fluorine and oxygen.
Yes, fluorine can form a non polar bond, only with another fluorine atom, in fact fluorine gas.
Covalent bond
Polar covalent bond. Due to fluorine´s high electronegativity, the bond has a significant dipole moment. This bond is the strongest bond that can be formed in organic chemistry.
Nonpolar covalent.
All of the metallic elements will form an ionic bond with fluorine.
Fluorine most often forms ionic bonds with other elements.
With difficulty but yes it does - particularly Fluorine and oxygen.
Fluorine is separated by electrolysis. It's when you pass an electric current through a solution with ions which then splits the bond of the elements.
Examples: oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, fluorine, carbon, chlorine, etc.
It bonds well with anything in the group 1 Alkaline metals column.
Fluorine seems a likely answer
fluorine and silicon form a perdominately ionic bond. fluorine is a nonmetal and silicon is a metal.
Yes, fluorine can form a non polar bond, only with another fluorine atom, in fact fluorine gas.
Potassium and fluorine will form an ionic bond
Covalent bond
Covalent bond