Presumably it would be a formula for something that doesn't exist, e.g. ArO.
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Yes. An ionic bond is formed between a metal and a non metal. In this case, Mg is the metal, and O is the non metal.
No it is not, table salt is an example of an ionic bond.
An Ionic bond is metals bonding to non-metals. A Covalent bond is non-metals bonding to non-metals.
Zinc Chloride is a ionic bond because Zinc a metal and chlorine a none metal. During a ionic bond there's a e- (Electron) transfer.
when a metal forms bond with a non metal the bond is an ionic bond.
metal/non-metal bond, e.g. KCl
Yes. An ionic bond is formed between a metal and a non metal. In this case, Mg is the metal, and O is the non metal.
No it is not, table salt is an example of an ionic bond.
An Ionic bond is metals bonding to non-metals. A Covalent bond is non-metals bonding to non-metals.
The common example of ionic bond is NaCl the common salt.
Zinc Chloride is a ionic bond because Zinc a metal and chlorine a none metal. During a ionic bond there's a e- (Electron) transfer.
it must be a covalent bond because metals and non metals form ionic bond
An ionic bond is between a metal and a non-metal. Calcium is a metal and chlorine is a non-metal, so yes they form an ionic bond as CaCl2
ionic bond because Na is metal and F is non metal.
when a metal forms bond with a non metal the bond is an ionic bond.
Covalent bonds can only happen between non-metals, therefore this must be ionic because calium is a metal
In the increasing order, they are non polar covalent bond < polar covalent bond < ionic bond.