the alkali and alkaline earth metals
I think it's electrons.
The most obvious difference is that covalent bondingoccurs between non-metals, whereas ionic bondingoccurs between a metal and a non-metal.Covalent bonding is also a bonding process which shares electrons, whereas ionic bonding is a bonding process in which electrons are transferred. This would therefore also affect the way in which you draw dot and cross diagrams for a covalent compound versus an ionic compound.
Halons are a class of element, not a type of charge. As for why the halogens have the most stable charges, they don't - at least not all of them.
It should be Ionic... Covalent Bonding - the name spell out the formula e.g Carbon dioxide, Silicon Tetra Chloride etc Ionic Compound - named by naming the ions they contain e.g Magnesium Sulfate, Sodium Chloride etc
Electors is the subatomic particle. This is what is the most involved in chemical bonding.
I think it's electrons.
These particles are the electrons.
All of following are common types of bonding in minerals except _____. a. ionic b. metallic c. covalent d. electropotential e. van der Waal's
just electrons
Chemical bonding is very essential for atoms. Take for example: the element carbon. It contains four valence electrons and needs 4 more to make it stable. In order to do that, bonding is needed. Covalent bonding is applicable to organic compounds while ionic bonding is for inorganic compounds.
The most obvious difference is that covalent bondingoccurs between non-metals, whereas ionic bondingoccurs between a metal and a non-metal.Covalent bonding is also a bonding process which shares electrons, whereas ionic bonding is a bonding process in which electrons are transferred. This would therefore also affect the way in which you draw dot and cross diagrams for a covalent compound versus an ionic compound.
An isotope is unstable because isotopes are only atoms with a change in the number of neutrons. For an atom to become stable, it should have the maximum number of electrons it can have in its outer most shell, but since isotopes only deal with neutrons, this problem is not dealt with in this case. When there is a change in the number of electrons, it is called a ion. It can become stable through ionic bonding, covalent bonding and metallic bonding, depending on the two elements that are meant to bond.
Ionic bonding takes place between ions. So, it can be said that it has most amount of ionic character
the answer to this question is ionic bonding....x and this is correct before you question my answer...x
Halons are a class of element, not a type of charge. As for why the halogens have the most stable charges, they don't - at least not all of them.
It should be Ionic... Covalent Bonding - the name spell out the formula e.g Carbon dioxide, Silicon Tetra Chloride etc Ionic Compound - named by naming the ions they contain e.g Magnesium Sulfate, Sodium Chloride etc
That would be the Nobel gasses, 8A, because they have an octet of 8 electrons fully filling their valance shells so that they naturally do not react with other elements is either ionic or covalent bonding.