as they are of non-metals, so covalent forms hydrochloric acid.
An ionic bond
No, it is an aromatic organic compound so it is covalent compound.
The hydrochloric acid molecule has a polar covalent bond between hydrogen and chlorine atoms.
Though perchloric acid dissociates into ions in an aqueous medium, it is a covalent compound, more accurately, with a polar covalent bond.
The type of bond that the compound phenol salicylate has is a covalent bond. It is created by heating phenol and salicylic acid together.
When Iron and sulphur bond if forms the compound iron sulphide
It depends what compound it is in. In water it is covalent. In trichloracetic acid it is ionic.
HCl (Hydrogen Chloride) is a covalent compound and forms a covalent bond. However, if water is added to hydrogen chloride, it forms hydrochloric acid which is an ionic compound that has ionic bonds.
Acid:A compound that can donate a proton or accept a pair of electrons to form a covalent bond with a base
calcium and lithum
PO4 is a radical, not a compound, and it has a covalent bond, not an ionic bond.
Nitric Acid is a fairly strong acid. The loose H-N bond is why it is an acid to begin with: the oxygens pull electron density away from the Nitrogen and weaken the bond between the nitrogen and hydrogen, allowing it to easily fall off. Nitric acid is also the only compound to dissolve metallic copper!