answersLogoWhite

0

it has metallic bonding

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Does copper form a covalent compound?

Copper Chloride is an ionic bond. So, no. It isn't a covalent bond. :)


Is water a covalent or a metallic bond?

Water has a covalent bond.


What type of chemical bond of copper wire?

Copper is bound by the metallic bond. Simply put, the valence electrons are held in a delocalised bond which is shared throughout the structure.


What type of bond will form between the elements zinc and copper?

zinc sulfate and copper. it is a displacement reaction, the more reactive metal reacts with the compound of the less reacive metal


Is solid copper wiring a ionic bond?

No, solid copper wiring does not involve an ionic bond. Copper atoms in the wire form metallic bonds where electrons are delocalized and move freely between the atoms, creating a "sea of electrons" that holds the metal together.


What type of bond would hold several copper atoms together?

Copper atoms would be held together by metallic bonding, where the electrons are delocalized and allow for the copper atoms to conduct electricity and heat efficiently.


Is gold a covalent bond or metallic bond?

pure solid gold utilizes metallic bonding


Does copper have an ionic or covalent bond?

The bond between the copper and carbonate is ionic since the copper is positive (cation) and the carbonate is negative (anion) therefore the two opposing charges are attracted to each other. Carbonate is a polyatomic ion though therefore having a covalent bond. Therefore there is a covalent and ionic bond within Copper Carbonate.


What chemical bond is silver copper?

The bond is metallic.


Is copper bromide a covalent bond?

No, copper bromide does not have a covalent bond. Copper bromide typically forms an ionic bond due to the large electronegativity difference between copper and bromine atoms.


Are metal atoms all joined together by covalent bonds?

Metals form what is known as a metallic bond. It is somewhat similar to a covalent bond in that the electrons are shared, however, in a covalent bond the electrons are shared by a single molecule, and in a metallic bond, the electrons are shared by all the metallic atoms in that particular object.


When metal atoms share their pooled electrons what is formed?

Metallic bonding.