An ionic bond
The alkali metal potassium and the halogenfluorine will form an ionic bond.
Ionic bond
This bond is covalent.
it will be a covalent bond
Yes, fluorine can form a non polar bond, only with another fluorine atom, in fact fluorine gas.
An Ionic Bond.
Potassium and fluorine will form an ionic bond
The alkali metal potassium and the halogenfluorine will form an ionic bond.
a ionic bond
Ionic bond
Yes, they form an ionic bond.
The bond between K (potassium) and F (fluorine) to make KF is an IONIC bond.
This bond is covalent.
I remember that by thinking of table salt. Basic Na(Sodium) and Cl(Chlorine) one is a metal the other is a non-metal. They have an ionic bond; same as potassium and fluorine. I remember the difference between ionic and covalent by this someones answer which said "the names bond. Ionic bond, taken not shared" Its silly but it works :)
The bond between the metal potassium (K) and the nonmetal fluorine (F) is ionic. During the formation of the ionic compound potassium fluoride (KF), the potassium atom loses an electron and becomes a positively charged ion, and the fluorine atom gains the electron and becomes a negatively charged ion. The electrostatic attraction between the two oppositely charged ions is the ionic bond. In general, a metal and a nonmetal will form an ionic bond.
All of the metallic elements will form an ionic bond with fluorine.
it would be "pure" covalent bond. it is pure because the difference in electronegitivity is 0, resulting in a perfectly covalent bond.