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I would imagine, logically, Calcium would react with every element except the Noble Gases - as they already have full outer energy levels, thus being unreactive. You will often find one calcium reacting with one element from group 6, for example Oxygen. CaO (as they strive to reach a full outer shell.)
Calcium and fluorine will form an ionic bond.
Chlorine reacts readily with calcium. Calcium donates two electrons to this ionic bond and chlorine accepts one electron from calcium into its valance shell, so you need two chlorines to react with calcium. Ca(2+) and Cl- = CaCl2 Calcium chloride
Oxygen. Hydrogen and oxygen bond in a ratio of 2 hydrogen atoms to one oxygen atom to form water, represented by the chemical formula H2O.
No, it is ionic
Calcium chloride is an ionic bond because its made of more than one element.
Gsb is how the element of material is bond.
They would form an ionic bond. Calcium is a metal and oxygen is a non-metal, and the ionic bond is the most common way these two types of elements get together. Calcium has 2 valence electrons, which it will lose to oxygen, which has 6 and therefore needs 2. Calcium and oxygen will combine in a 1:1 ratio to form calcium oxide with the formula CaO.
If they bond in a 1 to 1 ration, it would be XP. If it was a 2 to 1 ratio, it would be X (subscript of 2) P, and so on.
ionic bond
I would imagine, logically, Calcium would react with every element except the Noble Gases - as they already have full outer energy levels, thus being unreactive. You will often find one calcium reacting with one element from group 6, for example Oxygen. CaO (as they strive to reach a full outer shell.)
Calcium is a metallic element and is not bonded covalently or ionically. It tends to form ionic compounds when it does react.
The bond between calcium and sulfur would be ionic. The corresponding compound would be calcium sulfide.
It would create calcium bromide which is written as CaBr2.
The bond between calcium and carbon in calcium carbide is an ionic bond.
an ionic bond