The answer may depend on the context of the question. Bonds that are somewhere between covalent and ionic but are more ionic in nature are sometimes termed primarily ionic.
Yes, LiCl is the chemical formula for the compound lithium chloride. It is an ionic compound, where there is strong electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged Li+ and Cl- ions. The lithium and chloride ions occupy alternate and opposite positions in the giant lattice structure characteristic of an ionic compound.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
A covalent compound, not ionic
Copper(II) sulfide is an ionic compound.
No, like all sodium (Na) compound it is ionic.
Yes, LiCl is the chemical formula for the compound lithium chloride. It is an ionic compound, where there is strong electrostatic attraction between oppositely charged Li+ and Cl- ions. The lithium and chloride ions occupy alternate and opposite positions in the giant lattice structure characteristic of an ionic compound.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
No Its an ionic compound
A covalent compound, not ionic
Copper(II) sulfide is an ionic compound.
No, like all sodium (Na) compound it is ionic.
Is ionic
Ionic compound
Zyban is not an ionic compound.
ionic compound
Methane is not a ionic compound.
No, the bonding is ionic- electrons are transferred to form ions Ca2+ and Cl-