The net charge of an ionic compound is equivalent to zero.
+2
Yes it is. Ionic bonds tend to form between metals and nonmetals.
No, it is an ionic bond. Calcium(Ca) has a +2 charge and Chlorine(Cl) has a -1 charge. So one Ca and two Cl give a net charge of zero. Any bond that deals with a charge, like this one, is going Tobe an ionic bond.
Calcium
The net charge of an ionic compound is equivalent to zero.
+2
Calcium carbonate is ionic. CO3 is a poly atomic ion with a charge of 2- and calcium is a metal with a 2+ charge. Because I'd these ionic charges they form ionic bonds
Yes it is. Ionic bonds tend to form between metals and nonmetals.
No, it is an ionic bond. Calcium(Ca) has a +2 charge and Chlorine(Cl) has a -1 charge. So one Ca and two Cl give a net charge of zero. Any bond that deals with a charge, like this one, is going Tobe an ionic bond.
The net charge is zero.
calcium is mdonating one electron to each chloride. This makes the calcium a positive charge and the chloride a negative charge. This is called ionic bonding (CaCl2)
Calcium
ionic
A neutral calcium atom that loses two electrons has a +2 charge.
calcium nitride is ionic.
Calcium chloride is an ionic compound.