The bond is covalent.
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.
molecular
Nitrogen oxides are not ionic compounds.
covalent, because the elements are both nonmetals. If it was a metal it would be a ionic bond.
Nitrogen and hydrogen don't form ionic compounds. they form only covalent compounds as in ammonia (NH3) or hydrazine (H2N-NH2) etc
Covalent Bond.
Nitrogen and Oxygen are covalently bonded.
no, they combine using covalent bonds
I had this same question; because dinitrogen tetroxide has 2 Nitrogen & oxygen atoms, I wrote that it is covalent. My reasoning was that it doesn't combine negative and positive charges, both nitrogen and oxygen have negative charges.
No. An ionic bond is a bond between a metal and a nonmetal. Since oxygen and nitrogen are both nonmetals, they form a covalent bond.
Covalent
Covalent
Nitrogen has a covalent molecule.
molecular
Covalent
Covalent
Covalent