Carbon - it is the basis for organic chemistry.
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
ionic because it contains a metal and nonmetals.
The carbon-oxygen and carbon-hydrogen bonds are covalent. Any bond formed by potassium is ionic.
Carbon and Chlorine form polarized covalent bonds
yes
chlorine
Yes. a covalent bond is formed between carbon and chlorine.
No. A carbon-chlorine bond is a polar covalent bond.
The carbon-oxygen and carbon-hydrogen bonds are covalent. Any bond formed by potassium is ionic.
ionic because it contains a metal and nonmetals.
Carbon and Chlorine form polarized covalent bonds
yes
There is no carbon in sodium chloride. Sodium chloride, what we call table salt, contains sodium and chlorine in a one-to-one ratio. These molecules have no carbon in them at all.
In sodium chloride the bond between chlorine and sodium is ionic; sodium chloride form large lattices. The crystalline structure is face-centered cubic.Diamond has also a similar (not identical) crystalline structure face-centered cubic. But the bonds between carbon atoms are covalent !
A carbon-chlorine bond would be covalent but chlorine is more electronegative than carbon so the bond would be polar.
This is a covalent bond.
Salt is composed of sodium and chlorine; it contains no carbon.