because the bond between them have greater polarity than that of a covalent bond.
Sodium chloride, an ionic compound, is formed.
Ionic bond
a metal and a nonmetal such as sodium and sulfur which would make sodium sulfide
Covalent bonds are between two non-metals while ionic bonds are made between a metal and a non-metal. Chlorine is a non-metal, so a covalent bond forms in a diatomic molecule of chlorine.
Ionic bonds are formed when electrons are gained or lost. This is the complete transfer of electrons between the atoms. For e.g sodium(Na) releases its one electron which is transfered to the deserving chlorine atom(Cl). So, chlorine becomes negatively charged and the sodium atom becomes a positive ion(Na+). This is the case when electrons are completely transfered from sodium to chlorine and ionic bond is formed i.e NaCl. Moreover, when electrons are shared between atoms covalent bonds may form.
Sodium chloride, an ionic compound, is formed.
The sodium atom gives an electron to the chlorine atom to make the sodium and chloride ions respectively. Then they form ionic bonds forming sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride has ionic bonds.
Salt.
Sodium chloride has ionic bonds inside.
molecular bonds
Ionic bond
Sodium chloride has ionic bonds; sodium chloride form a giant lattice.
Common salt is NACl and contains both sodium and chlorine. It can therefre be used as a source of chlorine (electrolysis) and sodium compounds.
a metal and a nonmetal such as sodium and sulfur which would make sodium sulfide
Chlorine can form both ionic and covalent bonds, with metals and non-metals respectively.
Bonds do not "make up" any substance by themselves; atoms and/or ions are always necessary. The formula unit of sodium consists of one sodium cation and one chloride anion, and these are bound to each other by an ionic bond.Sodium chloride [note spelling] is held together by ionic bonds.