yes
Rubidium is a solid metal so its atoms are held together through Metallic bond which is the hybrid form of covalent and ionic bonds and may be explained by conduction bond.
RbBr is the chemical formula of rubidium bromide.RbBr has an ionic bond.
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
Well, you have this a little wrong. the eleectrons are involved in a chemical reaction, but are not themselves undergoing the reaction. they are the cause of a reaction and take part in it, but do not undergo a reaction. your question really is "What kind of bond does Rubidium make?" the answer to this is an ionic bond. Rubidium is an alkalai metal, and therefore ONLY creates ionic bonds. Rubidium forces its single valence electron onto another atom, at which time they each gain an electromagnetic charge. the positively charged rubidium ion is attracted to the negatively charged ion (almost definitely a non-metal, such as fluorine) causing them to be bonded.
Rubidium oxide has an ionic bond.
yes
It forms an ionic bond.
1: RbCl (Rubidium has 1+ charge, and Chlorine has 1-)
Rubidium is a solid metal so its atoms are held together through Metallic bond which is the hybrid form of covalent and ionic bonds and may be explained by conduction bond.
RbBr is the chemical formula of rubidium bromide.RbBr has an ionic bond.
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
Well, you have this a little wrong. the eleectrons are involved in a chemical reaction, but are not themselves undergoing the reaction. they are the cause of a reaction and take part in it, but do not undergo a reaction. your question really is "What kind of bond does Rubidium make?" the answer to this is an ionic bond. Rubidium is an alkalai metal, and therefore ONLY creates ionic bonds. Rubidium forces its single valence electron onto another atom, at which time they each gain an electromagnetic charge. the positively charged rubidium ion is attracted to the negatively charged ion (almost definitely a non-metal, such as fluorine) causing them to be bonded.
Yes it is an ionic compound. Rubidium(Rb) is the cation with 1+ charge and Fluorine(F) is the anion with 1- charge. They are formed by the donation of one electron from the valence shell of Rubidium to Fluorine and hence they form an ionic bond, which is the electrostatic force of attration between two oppositely charged particles.
Rubidium hypochlorite is the name for this chemical formula.
Rb is the symbol for the element, rubidium.
Rb is rubidium, O is oxygen. They will combine to form Rb2O which is called rubidium oxide.