Sodium and calcium form the cations Na+ and Ca(2+).
Ca (calcium) is an element, not a compound. and it can only form ionic compounds.
No. Sodium and calcium will not react with each other because they are both non-metals.
The alkali metals are Lthe group 1 elements are Lithium, Li; sodium, Na; Potassium, K Rubidium, Rb;Caesium, Cs and francium, Fr. They form ionic compounds where they are all have single positive charges.
Sulfur can form both ionic and covalent compounds. For example, sulfur dioxide is a covalent compound whereas sulfides of metals are ionic compounds.
Examples: calcium carbonate, potassium carbonate, sodium carbonate. These compounds are decomposed before melting.
- If you think only to isolated elements all these elements can form polyatomic compounds.- Calcium and sodium form ionic compounds.- H, N, O, Cl can form ionic or covalent compouds.
Sodium tends to form ionic compounds.
No: sodium forms a positive ion in its ionic compounds.
Yes, all sodium compounds are ionic.
substances such as sodium and chlorine for ionic compounds basically it is neutral elements that form ionic compounds
Yes. These two elements alone will form ionic sodium sulfide, and together with oxygen they can form several other ionic compounds such as Na2SO4.
Sodium phosphates are ionic compounds.
Chlorine (Cl2) is not an ionic compound. It is a covalently bonded element. Chlorine can form ionic compounds like NaCl (Sodium Chloride) or CaCl2 (Calcium Chloride) but is not itself an ionic compound.
both are elements. but both form ionic compounds
Calcium is a metallic element and is not bonded covalently or ionically. It tends to form ionic compounds when it does react.
Rubidium (an alkali metal) does not form compounds or ionic bonds with calcium (an alkaline earth metal). The two each form compounds with several of the same elements (e.g. chloride, carbonate, nitrate).
Calcium fluoride is an example of an ionic compound, not a covalent compound. Covalent compounds form between two nonmetals, while ionic compounds form between a metal and a nonmetal.