ide is the suffix used for the ending anion of an ionic bonding.
It is BOTH. K2CO3 is a molecule in its own right. Any substance that is a combination of different elements is a MOLECULE. The question should ask 'Is potassium carbonate ionic or covalent?'. Again the answer is BOTH. The potassium cation (K^(+)) binds ionically to the carbonate anion. However, within the carbonate anion (CO3^(2-)) , the three atoms 'C', & 'O' combine COVALENTLY, leaving two 'spare' electrons to combine ionically with the potassium cation. Hence the charge of '2-' on the carbonate anion.
Barium nitrate is an ionic compound. It is composed of the metal cation barium (Ba2+) and the nitrate anion (NO3-), which are held together by ionic bonds.
Ammonium cyanide is an ionic compound, as it is formed from the combination of the ammonium cation (NH4+) and the cyanide anion (CN-), which are held together by ionic bonds.
FeSO4 is an ionic compound. It is composed of Fe2+ cation and SO4 2- anion, which are held together by ionic bonds.
Ionic because Ionic has metals or metal and non metals and for it to be molecular it can not contain metal
Sodium bromide is an ionic compound because it is composed of a metal cation (sodium) and a nonmetal anion (bromide) held together by ionic bonds.
separately
Yeah, an example is a radical anion that it creates (ketyl): Diphenylketyl Na + Ph2CO →Na+Ph2CO−
NaNO2 is an ionic compound. It is made up of ions, with sodium (Na) being a metal cation and nitrite (NO2) being a polyatomic anion.
KClO is an ionic compound. It consists of a metal cation (K+) and a polyatomic anion (ClO-), forming an ionic bond through the transfer of electrons.
An ionic compound contain a cation and an anion.
No, like all sodium (Na) compound it is ionic.