Yes. Phosphorus in its elemental form can com in the form of P4 molecules (white phosphorous) or as a covalent network (red and black phosphorus)
yes, because it sounds all sciency to me
This is a covalent bond.
absolutely.
Calcium and fluorine will form an ionic bond.
The bond in lithium fluoride is ionic and the compound is polar.The crystalline structure is face-cenered cubic.
Iit is phosphorus penta fluoride a molecule with Trigonal bipyramidal geometry.
The bond between Ag ,silver and phosphate is the ionic bond, but within phosphate ion oxygen and phosphorus form covalent bond ( one oxygen bond is coordinate covalent).
The bond in magnesium fluoride is ionic.
The bond between phosphorus and fluorine atoms is more polar than the bond between phosphorus and chlorine atoms.
The single bond length between oxygen and phosphorus is 176 picometers but I am unsure of the double bond length.
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Ca is a metal. F is a non metal. The bond between a metal and non metal is considered an ionic bond.
covalent bond
ionic bond
H3p
Polar bond between H and I in HI
Covalent bonds
Ionic bond in lithium fluoride.
Yes, Potassium Fluoride is formed by an ionic bond between a K+ ion and a F- ion.
CaF2 Calcium fluoride