Ionic compounds can be easily found in salts (and in mineral ores when it comes to industrial level).
Some are: - calcium in butter - potassiumin cheese - silicon in conditioner - NaCl in table salt - etc.
Almost all. Some such as calcium carbonate, silver chloride are not soluble. Generally ionic compounds are soluble in water due to their ionic bonds which makes them easy to dissociate in polar solutions such as water.
No. There is no such thing as an "ionic bonded molecule," as molecules, by definition, are helld together by covalent bonds. Ionic compounds are not molecular. Some ionic compounds disassociated in water while others do not.
There is not a statement available so it is difficult to answer this. Some properties of ionic compounds are high melting points, solid in room temperature, and they are brittle.
Almost all molten covalent compounds are much worseconductors than almost any molten ionic compounds. However, note that some ionic compounds contain covalently bonded polyatomic ions, and many of these can conduct electricity as well as most other ions in a melt.
No
some compounds are composed of molecules bound by ionic compounds so no
Water can dissolve some ionic compounds as well as some molecular compounds because of its polarity. It is polar enough to dissolve ionic compounds into their ions. Water does not dissolve molecular compounds by breaking covalent bonds, but through intermolecular forces.
Some are: - calcium in butter - potassiumin cheese - silicon in conditioner - NaCl in table salt - etc.
Almost all. Some such as calcium carbonate, silver chloride are not soluble. Generally ionic compounds are soluble in water due to their ionic bonds which makes them easy to dissociate in polar solutions such as water.
No. There is no such thing as an "ionic bonded molecule," as molecules, by definition, are helld together by covalent bonds. Ionic compounds are not molecular. Some ionic compounds disassociated in water while others do not.
No. There is no such thing as an "ionic bonded molecule," as molecules, by definition, are helld together by covalent bonds. Ionic compounds are not molecular. Some ionic compounds disassociated in water while others do not.
suck my balls
Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is an ionic compound (to some extent) , all ionic compounds are polar.
There is not a statement available so it is difficult to answer this. Some properties of ionic compounds are high melting points, solid in room temperature, and they are brittle.
Neon isn't found in compounds.
Almost all molten covalent compounds are much worseconductors than almost any molten ionic compounds. However, note that some ionic compounds contain covalently bonded polyatomic ions, and many of these can conduct electricity as well as most other ions in a melt.