Carbon monoxide.
The covalent compound CO is called carbon monoxide.
CO is a covalent compound. Carbon monoxide consists of a shared pair of electrons between carbon and oxygen atoms, which is characteristic of covalent bonding.
No, it is covalent.
yes, carbon monoxide is a covalent compound between carbon and oxygen
CO is a polar covalent compound. It is covalent because the compound is made up of nonmetals. It is polar because the electronegativity difference is 1. Answer: Polar Covalent Compound
P2O5: Phosphorus Pentoxide CO: Carbon Monoxide
Co, carbon monoxide, is covalent. Two non-metals, difference in electronegativity mkes the bond polar.
I'm not sure what you mean by "purely covalent", since the ionic-vs-covalent distinction is expressed in terms of electronegativity, which can take a range of values (higher values = more ionic). CO is very much a covalent compound though.
Carbon Monoxide
Yes, CO is a binary compound. It is formed by two different elements. C is Carbon and O is Oxygen. CO is Carbon monoxide.
CO is a molecular compound. It consists of a covalent bond between carbon and oxygen atoms.
CO is molecular