In metals there is metallic bonding, in which all the metal atoms contribute valence electrons to a commonly shared electron cloud.
between metals
Metals have a specific metallic bond.
The type of atoms that donate electrons in ionic bonding. Metals and transition metals usually.
Covalent bonding is a type not found in metals (there mainly metal bonds or ionic bonds) In nonmetals more covalent bonding is common.
Metals have what is called a metallic bond, in which all the constituent atoms share their valence electrons in the form of an electron cloud.
between metals
metals and non-metals.
Metals have a specific metallic bond.
depends on the conditions they are exposed to and also the type of metal
in polymers you have covalent bonding between the atoms of C & H as both are not metals.
The type of atoms that donate electrons in ionic bonding. Metals and transition metals usually.
when two type of non metals bond together , they always bonded by covalent bond because they have the tendency to share the electrons as all the non metals are electronegative so the process of losing and gaining cannot take place ...because in two non metals no one can lose electron so they have to share electons for example in water(H2O, CO2 etc...)
Covalent bonding is a type not found in metals (there mainly metal bonds or ionic bonds) In nonmetals more covalent bonding is common.
Metals have what is called a metallic bond, in which all the constituent atoms share their valence electrons in the form of an electron cloud.
All metals form metallic bonds with other metal atoms.
I think the bonding is covalent as it is between two non-metals
Covalent... Ionic bonds take place only between metals and non-metals whereas covalent bonds occur between non-metals only. Since Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen are non-metals, the type of bonding occurring here is covalent