Beryllium chloride
BeCl2
Ionic
No. Beryllium has only two valence electrons and forms ionic bonds with chlorine, not covalent bonds. Beryllium atoms form 2+ ions, and chlorine atoms form 1- ions in order to form the ionic compound beryllium chloride, BeCl2.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
A covalent compound, not ionic
BeCl2
Beryllium chloride, BeCl2
Ionic
Be is the only member of II group which can not form the ionic bond so BeCl2 is a covalent compound.
No. Beryllium has only two valence electrons and forms ionic bonds with chlorine, not covalent bonds. Beryllium atoms form 2+ ions, and chlorine atoms form 1- ions in order to form the ionic compound beryllium chloride, BeCl2.
Be and Cl form an ionic bond (BeCl2), and it is polar.
BeCl2
We know that the alkaline earth metal beryllium (Be) and the halogen chlorine (Cl) form the ionic compound beryllium chloride (BeCl2). The equation might look like this:Be + Cl2 => BeCl2
BeCl2 is the molecular formula for beryllium chloride. The geometry of the chemical compound is linear and it is also nonpolar.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
No Its an ionic compound
BeCl2(aq) + 2NaOH(aq) -> 2NaCl(aq) + Be(OH)2(s) Be(aq) + 2OH(aq) -> Be(OH)2(s) Hope this helps!