Cation goes first
Aluminum chloride is an ionic compound because aluminum is a metal and chlorine is a nonmetal. When a metal and a nonmetal are combined they make up an ionic compound. Incorrect. Aluminium Chloride is covalent.
It is covalent and the bonds are polar covalent. This is because of the difference in electronegativity between aluminium and bromide.
As cations, they retain their original names (examples: aluminum chloride, sulfur dioxide). As anions, they get "ide" endings and become aluminide (very rare) and sulfide (not quite as rare). Combined with oxygen in complex anions, they form aluminates, sulfites, sulfates, etc.
This is a reaction between an acid and a metal compound. The products from will be a salt and hydrogen gas. In this case, Aluminium chloride (AlCl3) will be produced together with hydrogen gas (H2).
aluminium nitrate.
In naming an ionic compound, the cation is named first, with no modification of the element name, and the anion is named secondly, with the element name modified by the suffix "ide". The incorrect name given in the question applies the proper method for the cation to the anion and vice versa.
Aluminum chloride is an ionic compound because aluminum is a metal and chlorine is a nonmetal. When a metal and a nonmetal are combined they make up an ionic compound. Incorrect. Aluminium Chloride is covalent.
The chemical formula of aluminium phosphide is AlP.
As a product of melting together aluminium and iron is the intermetallic compound Al3Fe.
It is covalent and the bonds are polar covalent. This is because of the difference in electronegativity between aluminium and bromide.
It is an organo-metallic compound and the bond between Alluminium and Carbon is covalent in nature due to the high polarizing power of aluminium 3+
Both compound have covalent bonds with formula FeCl3 and AlCl3.
As cations, they retain their original names (examples: aluminum chloride, sulfur dioxide). As anions, they get "ide" endings and become aluminide (very rare) and sulfide (not quite as rare). Combined with oxygen in complex anions, they form aluminates, sulfites, sulfates, etc.
Bauxite is the ore of aluminium, from which aluminium is is extracted.
aluminium +potassium=salt +water
The formula is AlBr3. The compound is called aluminium(III) bromide or aluminium tribromide. It is actually not ionic in spite of being a metal plus a non-metal but consists of dimers, Al2Br6 , Br2AlBr2AlBr2
Alum is both a specific chemical compound and a class of chemical compounds. The specific compound is the hydratedpotassium aluminium sulfate (potassium alum) with the formula KAl(SO4)2·12H2O where as Alumina is an amphoteric oxide with the chemical formula Al2O3.