ionic bond
Ionic - electron transfer Covalent - electron share (co - share)
It's called an ionic bond. It usually results from a metal, which forms a positive ion, reacting with a non-metal, which forms a negative ion.
False. A covalent bond is formed by the sharing of valence electrons.
No. The mutual attractions between many positive ions and many negative ions result in a compound with ionic bonds.
Compounds that are formed from cations and anions, or ions with negative and positive charge. Ionic compounds are also compounds that are formed from a metal and a non-metal.
Ionic - electron transfer Covalent - electron share (co - share)
It's called an ionic bond. It usually results from a metal, which forms a positive ion, reacting with a non-metal, which forms a negative ion.
When positive and negative ions attract each other, an ionic bond is formed. Ionic bonding refers to the complete transfer of valence electron between atoms.
False. A covalent bond is formed by the sharing of valence electrons.
No. The mutual attractions between many positive ions and many negative ions result in a compound with ionic bonds.
A polar covalent bond consists of a positive and negative end.
Compounds that are formed from cations and anions, or ions with negative and positive charge. Ionic compounds are also compounds that are formed from a metal and a non-metal.
A hydrogen bond.
a negative ion
A chemical bond with unequal sharing of electrons is called a covalent bond. This results to a slightly negative charge on one end and a slightly positive charge on the other end.
To become more stable: positive+negative=neutral. Neutral is more stable than positive and/or negative.
compounds are formed when two ions (charged atoms) bond, in this case ionically. an ionic bond is formed between a metal and a non metal, and those atoms will form cations (positive ions) and anions (negative ions) -respectively. when a positive and a negative join together, they will cancel out, therefore creating no charge on your ionic compound.