It is a covalent bond. F-F bond is covalent.
F2 is covalent and KCl is ionic
The Lewis structure of gaseous fluorine shows that each fluorine atom contributes one electron to share between them. This makes a single covalent bond.
The bond order is 1 in the case of F2 moleucle
the bond between f-f is covalent as both share electrons.and they dont have much electronegativity difference.
No, like the other halogens it only contains a single bond.
F2 is covalent and KCl is ionic
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The Lewis structure of gaseous fluorine shows that each fluorine atom contributes one electron to share between them. This makes a single covalent bond.
The bond order is 1 in the case of F2 moleucle
Yes it will form ionic bond (as in NaF or MgF2) or covalent bond as in F2 or ClF3)
the bond between f-f is covalent as both share electrons.and they dont have much electronegativity difference.
No, like the other halogens it only contains a single bond.
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None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
No, F2 is covalent but it is an element, not a compound.
The F-F bond (in F2) is covalent, and non polar covalent at that.
Cl2 has the maximum bond energy i the above mentioned compounds.