An ionic bond will form between a metal and a non-metal. This occurs because an atom's only goal is to fill its valence shell, the outer shell. The non-metal's nucleus is strong enough to pull the metal's valence electrons away, and and metal cannot stop the pull of the non-metals nucleus. And that way, both atoms have their valence shell filled.
A metal and a nonmetal can form an ionic bond.
Ionic bondit's called an ionic bondAn ionic bond is the type of bond formed between a cation and an anion.Ionic.They form an ionic bond.
no. they will form covalent bond
It is ionic bond
All of the metallic elements will form an ionic bond with fluorine.
Ionic, chlorine does not share any electrons with sodium to form a bond.
No, oxygen and nitrogen do not form an ionic bond. They are both nonmetals and tend to form covalent bonds where they share electrons rather than transfer them.
A metal tends to form an ionic bond with a non-metal. Metals bonding with other metals form a metallic bond, and non-metals bonding with other non-metals form a covalent bond.
Yes, sodium can form an ionic bond. In its ionic form, sodium loses its outer electron to become a positively charged ion (Na+), which can then bond with negatively charged ions. This creates a stable ionic compound.
Magnesium and iodine react to form the ionic compound magnesium iodide - MgI2.
No it is not. Carbon is a covalent bond.
It will be an Ionic Bond.