Carbon.
Yes. Hydrogen almost always forms covalent bonds. However, it is ionically bonded in a few compounds such as sodium hydride.
Tellurium is an element and will tend to form ionic bonds but can also form covalent bonds. Any element on its own is always nonpolar.
mostly double bonds and triple bonds
Ionic bonds are farther apart and covalent are closer together. Also covalent are almost always nonmetals and Ionic always a metal and nonmetal. Use slanted pencil trick to determine lower and higher electronegativity.
single
Carbon will almost always form bonds with other carbon atoms, and that is part of what makes it such a useful element.
platinum
Metals form generally forms ionic bonds as in salts.Carbon form covalent bonds, for ex.
Carbons almost always form covalent bonds.
Yes. Hydrogen almost always forms covalent bonds. However, it is ionically bonded in a few compounds such as sodium hydride.
Tellurium is an element and will tend to form ionic bonds but can also form covalent bonds. Any element on its own is always nonpolar.
In any diatomic element it is always a covalent bond.
mostly double bonds and triple bonds
Ionic bonds are farther apart and covalent are closer together. Also covalent are almost always nonmetals and Ionic always a metal and nonmetal. Use slanted pencil trick to determine lower and higher electronegativity.
a) Must include a metal and a nonmetal b) Must be of different elements c) Are always of the same element d) Are always two metals Need Answer! :( D) Are always two metals. a) is for ionic compounds b) is for nonpolar covalent bonds c) same as nonpolar covalent bonds b) Must be of different elements:)
single
Carbon based molecules are part of the family of compounds known as organic. Carbon bonding to other atoms is almost always of covalent nature; electrons are shared.