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Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
Sodium chloride is the compound salt is made out of.
Covalent. Be is highly electronegative to form ionic bonds.
the correct formula unit for the ionic compound barium oxide is BaO.
See the Web Links to the left of this answer for diagrams of the structure. This structure is called the "NaCl Structure"! Several other ionic compounds have the same structure, but it is named after NaCl since that is such a common compound.
Beryllium chloride, BeCl2
BeCl2
The ionic compound formed between magnesium and chlorine has the formula MgCl2.
We know that the alkaline earth metal beryllium (Be) and the halogen chlorine (Cl) form the ionic compound beryllium chloride (BeCl2). The equation might look like this:Be + Cl2 => BeCl2
The chemical formula of an ionic compound that contains aluminium and chlorine is aluminium chloride - AlCl3.
Zinc and chlorine react to form the binary ionic compound zinc chloride, which has the formula ZnCl2.
Beryllium oxide, BeO, not ionic
Yes. However, the correct formula is Na2SO4.
No. Beryllium has only two valence electrons and forms ionic bonds with chlorine, not covalent bonds. Beryllium atoms form 2+ ions, and chlorine atoms form 1- ions in order to form the ionic compound beryllium chloride, BeCl2.
ionic bonding
The chemical formula of aluminum chloride is AlCl3.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.