Ionic - electron transfer
Covalent - electron share (co - share)
Chloroform (CHCl3) is a covalent compound. It consists of covalent bonds formed by the sharing of electrons between chlorine and hydrogen atoms. Ionic compounds involve the transfer of electrons between atoms of different elements to form positive and negative ions.
Carbon tetrafluoride (CF4) is a covalent compound. In covalent compounds, atoms share electrons to form bonds, whereas in ionic compounds, atoms transfer electrons to form positive and negative ions that then attract each other. Since CF4 involves sharing of electrons between carbon and fluorine atoms, it is considered a covalent compound.
A compound that shares electrons is a covalent compound. In covalent bonding, atoms share electrons to achieve a full outer shell and form a stable molecule. Ionic compounds involve the transfer of electrons from one atom to another, resulting in the formation of positive and negative ions held together by electrostatic forces.
No, the attraction between a positive ion and a negative ion results in an ionic bond, not a covalent bond. In an ionic bond, electrons are transferred from one atom to another, while in a covalent bond, electrons are shared between atoms.
Vinegar is a polar covalent compound. It is composed of acetic acid (a covalent compound) and water (a polar compound), giving it polar characteristics due to the presence of partial positive and negative charges.
Chloroform (CHCl3) is a covalent compound. It consists of covalent bonds formed by the sharing of electrons between chlorine and hydrogen atoms. Ionic compounds involve the transfer of electrons between atoms of different elements to form positive and negative ions.
Carbon tetrafluoride (CF4) is a covalent compound. In covalent compounds, atoms share electrons to form bonds, whereas in ionic compounds, atoms transfer electrons to form positive and negative ions that then attract each other. Since CF4 involves sharing of electrons between carbon and fluorine atoms, it is considered a covalent compound.
Yes
A compound that shares electrons is a covalent compound. In covalent bonding, atoms share electrons to achieve a full outer shell and form a stable molecule. Ionic compounds involve the transfer of electrons from one atom to another, resulting in the formation of positive and negative ions held together by electrostatic forces.
No, the attraction between a positive ion and a negative ion results in an ionic bond, not a covalent bond. In an ionic bond, electrons are transferred from one atom to another, while in a covalent bond, electrons are shared between atoms.
Yes. We have covalent polar bonds, covalent not polar bonds and ionic bonds. If the electronegativity is below 1.2, the bond is covalent and not polar and the compound shares electrons..If EN is between 1.2 and 1.8 the bond is covalent polar which means that electrons are still shared, but one compound is more dominant and pulls the electrons stronger than the other. When the electronegativity is 1.8 or more, one compound takes away an electron and becomes negativ, and the other compound looses the electron and becomes positive. Positive and negative items attract each other and that is a polar bond.
Vinegar is a polar covalent compound. It is composed of acetic acid (a covalent compound) and water (a polar compound), giving it polar characteristics due to the presence of partial positive and negative charges.
Alcohol is a compound that contains a polar covalent bond. Polar covalent bonds occur when atoms with different electronegativities share electrons unevenly, leading to a partial positive and partial negative charge within the molecule.
In an ionic bond, one atom loses electrons( becomes more positive) and the other gains the electrons ( becomes more negative) what keeps them bonded is the now positive/negative attraction. In covalent bonding, both atoms share the electrons, but are again held together by positive/negative attraction. Short version: In ionic bond, one element in an ionic bond loses electrons, while the other gains electrons. Electrons are shared equally in covalent bonds.
Materials with ionic bonds share electrons unequally, leading to the formation of positive and negative ions. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons, either equally in nonpolar covalent bonds or unequally in polar covalent bonds, which can create a partial positive and negative charge within the molecule.
Covalent because it has Tri as a prefix and it shares electrons.
A polar covalent compound is a compound consisting of molecules which have regions of positive and negative charge due to the covalent bonding between atoms. The atom with a greater charged nucleus ( atoms with greater proton number) will attract the shared electrons causing them to move closer to the nucleus which will make this slightly negatively charged due to the negative electrons. The atom which the shared electrons has moved away from ( atoms with smaller proton number) will become slightly positively charged.