Ba 2+andS 2-formBaSAn ionic compound. So, an ionic bond is formed in barium sulphide.
An ionic bond would occur between sulfur and barium.
A chemical compound such as barium nitrate never "is" any type of chemical bond; instead, the compound "has" or "contains" pairs of atoms joined by such bonds. Barium nitrate happens to contain both of the most common types of bonds: Barium cations are bound ionically to polyatomic nitrate anions, and the nitrate anions are internally bonded by three covalent bonds between the sole nitrogen atom and each of the three oxygen atoms.
Two electrons are transferred to sulfur from barium to form barium sulfide.
i think it is BaF2
linear
Barium and tin are both metals, so they would not form any kind of bond.
it is ionicly bonded
covalent
Ba 2+andS 2-formBaSAn ionic compound. So, an ionic bond is formed in barium sulphide.
An ionic bond would occur between sulfur and barium.
Ba(OH)2 Barium hydroxide is an ionic bond formed from the cation, Ba2+, and two polyatomic hydroxide anions, OH-
A chemical compound such as barium nitrate never "is" any type of chemical bond; instead, the compound "has" or "contains" pairs of atoms joined by such bonds. Barium nitrate happens to contain both of the most common types of bonds: Barium cations are bound ionically to polyatomic nitrate anions, and the nitrate anions are internally bonded by three covalent bonds between the sole nitrogen atom and each of the three oxygen atoms.
ionic, because they're on opposite sides of the periodic table. same side=covalent, opposite=ionic.
Barium can bond easily with oxygen and the halogens family(row 17)
Two electrons are transferred to sulfur from barium to form barium sulfide.
Barium fluoride is a compound, not a bond. It has ionic bonding.