No, H2O (water) is not an ionic compound. It is a covalent compound made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together.
H2O is a molecular compound.
H2O (water) is a covalent compound, as no metals are involved.
Water's chemical formula is given in the question.
H2O (water) is a neutral molecule, so it does not have an ionic charge.
H2O is a covalent compound. It consists of two hydrogen atoms bonded to one oxygen atom through covalent bonds.
H2O is a molecular compound.
No, H2O is covalent.
H2O (water) is a covalent compound, as no metals are involved.
Mg3P2 is ionic. the rest are covalent
yes, like Na2CO3. H2O
The two types of compound are molecular and ionic. An ionic compound commonly used is table salt, or NaCl. A molecular compound commonly used is water, or H2O.
Water's chemical formula is given in the question.
H2O (water) is a neutral molecule, so it does not have an ionic charge.
H2O is a covalent compound. It consists of two hydrogen atoms bonded to one oxygen atom through covalent bonds.
CaCl2 represents an ionic compound because it consists of a metal (Ca) and a non-metal (Cl) bonded together through ionic bonds. CO2, H2O, and Br2 are molecular compounds because they consist of non-metals bonded together through covalent bonds.
H2O has a stronger bond then CaO because H2O is a covalent compound (made up of two nonmetals), whereas CaO is an ionic compound (made up of both a metal and nonmetal), and covalent bonds are stronger then ionic bonds.
H2O is a covalent compound with polar covalent bonds. In liquid water auto-ionisation takes placeH2O H+(aq) + OH-The dissocation is only very slight.