KCl is potassium chloride. Potassium is an alkali metal that needs to lose one valence electron to expose a full outer shell. Chloride is a halide that needs to gain one valence electron to fill its outer shell. Potassium will 'donate' an electron to chloride, which results in potassium having a 1+ charge and chloride having a 1- charge. The positive and negative charge attract each other, which creates the ionic bond.
its ionic because, potassium chloride contains solid, its made out of solid and all potassium compounds are included in there....
so the answer is yes, potassium chloride is ionic its not covalent...covalent is made by chemical boindings and metallic bindings are which are made of metals.
yes, ionic
Yes; it consists of potassium cations and chloride anions.
Potassium chloride is ionic as are all potassium compounds.
Potassium chloride has an ionic bond.
I think KCI ionic compound name is Potassium Chloride.
potassium, chloride and oxygen
Potassium chloride is an ionic solid, the ionic solids can conduct the electricity if they are in molten state or in aqueous solution.
Potassium chloride (KCl) has an ionic chemical bond.
Potassium chloride is ionic as are all potassium compounds.
Ionic
Potassium chloride has an ionic bond.
I think KCI ionic compound name is Potassium Chloride.
its ionic because, potassium chloride contains solid, its made out of solid and all potassium compounds are included in there.... so the answer is yes, potassium chloride is ionic its not covalent...covalent is made by chemical boindings and metallic bindings are which are made of metals. yes, ionic
Potassium chloride (KCl) has an ionic bond.
potassium, chloride and oxygen
sodium chloride, potassium chloride.
Potassium chloride has only an ionic bond.
Potassium chloride is an ionic solid, the ionic solids can conduct the electricity if they are in molten state or in aqueous solution.
All are ionic compounds and have chloride as the anion