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Yes, two chlorine atoms can bond, to form Cl2, which is the elemental form of chlorine.. The individual atoms do not gain or lose electrons but share them forming a covalent bond.
They form the diatomic Chlorine molecule Cl2
Atoms on the Right Hand Side of the periodic table - Carbon, Phosphorous, Chlorine itself etc
They form an ionic bond.
A nonpolar covalent bond forms when two chlorine atoms combine to form a chlorine (Cl2) molecule.
Yes, two chlorine atoms can bond, to form Cl2, which is the elemental form of chlorine.. The individual atoms do not gain or lose electrons but share them forming a covalent bond.
no
They form the diatomic Chlorine molecule Cl2
Atoms on the Right Hand Side of the periodic table - Carbon, Phosphorous, Chlorine itself etc
hydrogen and chlorine top form Hydrochloric acid. H + Cl = HCl. They each share one of their electrons Hope this helps, lm 92
They form an ionic bond.
A nonpolar covalent bond forms when two chlorine atoms combine to form a chlorine (Cl2) molecule.
2
nonpolar covalent bond
Fluorine Chlorine Bromine
Any metal atom will form an ionic bond with chlorine, as long as there is a complete transfer of electrons and both atoms become stable.
Ionic Bond