Potassium sulfide has an ionic bond.
NaCl contains ionic bonds, NH3 contains covalent bonds, K2S contains ionic bonds, and Li3N contains ionic bonds.
K2S or potassium sulfide is an ionic compound.
Formula for potassium sulfide is K2S.
K2S is an ionic compound. Potassium (K) is a metal that forms positively charged ions, and sulfur (S) is a nonmetal that forms negatively charged ions. The electrostatic attraction between these oppositely charged ions results in the formation of an ionic compound.
There are two cations in K2S. Potassium (K) has a +1 charge, so there are two potassium (K) cations in the compound K2S.
The correct name for the compound K2S is potassium sulfide.
If you have 2 moles of K+ for every mole of K2S and Molarity (M) is Moles per Liter. Then you know that you have .30 M of K2S. The way that you do that is setting up a series of conversion factors like so:(.15moles k2s/liter) x (2 moles of K/ 1 mole of K2S) = .30 moles k/ liter.The moles of K2S cancel out and you are left with moles of K per liter.
Potassium and sulfur react to give K2S potassium sulfide, an ionic compound. With excess sulfur polysulfides can be formed- these contain Sn2- ions.
It is K2S.
i don't know....... maybe the cation is sp3 hybridization?
No, K2S is not an ironic bond. K2S represents a chemical bond between a potassium (K) atom and a sulfur (S) atom, where they share electrons to form a stable compound. Irony refers to situations where the outcome is different from what is expected.
3.3 moles of K2S 3.3 moles of S-2 6.6 moles of K+1