Bromine (Br)
All nonmetals except the noble gasses will react with lithium to form ionic compounds.
An element that forms an ionic compound when it reacts with lithium is fluorine. Fluorine gains an electron to form the F^- ion, which then attracts the Li^+ ion from lithium to form the ionic compound lithium fluoride (LiF).
Fluorine forms an ionic compound when it reacts with lithium, forming lithium fluoride (LiF). Fluorine is highly electronegative and readily accepts the electron donated by lithium to form an ionic bond.
Li(I) lithium iodide is an ionic compound (salt)
Lithium acetate (CH3COOLi) is an ionic compound.
Lithium reacts with fluorine to form an ionic compound, LiF. The rest all form covalent compounds
No, It is ionic. All lithium compounds are ionic.
Li3N, lithium nitride, forms an ionic bond. Lithium is a metal that donates its electron to nitrogen, a nonmetal, to form a stable ionic compound.
Yes. Lithium is an alkali metal and forms the same kinds of compounds as sodium and potassium. Example: LiF, lithium fluoride
The name of the ionic compound Li2S is lithium sulfide.
No, lithium hydroxide forms an ionic bond. Lithium, being a metal, donates its electron to hydroxide, which is a polyatomic ion composed of oxygen and hydrogen. This results in the formation of an ionic compound.
In the binary ionic compound lithium iodide (LiI), the iodine (I) atom forms anions by gaining one electron to achieve a stable octet configuration. Lithium (Li) readily donates its one valence electron to form a cationic species Li⁺.
The element that forms the cation (positive ion) comes first in the formula for an ionic compound.