Zinc generally makes covalent bonds with non-metals.
Organometallic zinc compounds like dimethyl zinc or diethyl zinc are covalent.
ZnF2 does not have covalent bonds, as it is an ionic compound. In ZnF2, zinc donates electrons to fluorine to form ions with opposite charges that are held together by ionic bonds.
Zinc sulfide is a covalent compound.
Chromium and zinc typically do not form covalent bonds with each other. Chromium tends to form ionic bonds, while zinc can form both ionic and metallic bonds depending on the context. Covalent bonds are more commonly formed between nonmetals rather than between a metal like chromium and a metalloid like zinc.
Zinc phosphate is an ionic compound, not a covalent compound. It is formed by the transfer of electrons from zinc to phosphate ions, resulting in the formation of positively charged zinc cations and negatively charged phosphate anions, which are held together by electrostatic forces.
Zinc acetate is an ionic compound. It is formed from the ionic bond between zinc cations (Zn2+) and acetate anions (CH3COO-).
Zn= zinc SO4 = sulfate ZnSO4 = Zinc sulfate
zinc sulfate and copper. it is a displacement reaction, the more reactive metal reacts with the compound of the less reacive metal
ZnI2 is an ionic compound. It is formed between zinc (Zn), a metal, and iodine (I), a non-metal. Metals typically donate electrons to non-metals to form ionic bonds.
Zinc carbonate is ionically bonded, which could be viewed as maximally polar, but "polar" in chemistry is usually reserved for a description of covalent bonds.
Zinc sulfate is an ionic compound. Ionic bonds form between a metal (in this case, zinc) and a non-metal (sulfur). Zinc loses electrons to become a cation, while sulfate gains electrons to become an anion, resulting in the formation of an ionic bond between them.
Zinc, as with all metals, reacts to form ionic bonds with other elements.
No, sulphur is an element. Sulfur can form an unusually broad variety of molecules consisting of nothing but sulfur atoms, but all of them are covalent. You generally only get ionic compounds if your reactants are a metal and a non-metal. If not, then it's probably covalent. For example, zinc sulphide (ZnS) is an ionic compound, because you're combining a metal (zinc) with a nonmetal (sulphur). On the other hand, sulphur dioxide (SO2) is a covalent compound, since both reactants are nonmetals.