Ionic
Ammonium acetate is an ionic compound. It is formed from the ionic bond between the positively charged NH4+ ion (ammonium) and the negatively charged CH3COO- ion (acetate).
Calcium acetate is ionic. It is formed when a calcium cation (Ca2+) and an acetate anion (C2H3O2-) bond together through ionic bonds, which involve the transfer of electrons.
Zinc acetate is an ionic compound. It is formed from the ionic bond between zinc cations (Zn2+) and acetate anions (CH3COO-).
Acetate ions have both ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between the positively charged cation and the negatively charged acetate ion is ionic, while the bonds within the acetate ion itself (between carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms) are covalent.
Sodium acetate is an ionic compound. It is composed of sodium ions (Na+) and acetate ions (CH3COO-) held together by ionic bonds resulting from the transfer of electrons between the atoms.
Ionic
No, Covalent
Ammonium acetate is an ionic compound. It is formed from the ionic bond between the positively charged NH4+ ion (ammonium) and the negatively charged CH3COO- ion (acetate).
Lithium acetate (CH3COOLi) is an ionic compound.
Calcium acetate is ionic. It is formed when a calcium cation (Ca2+) and an acetate anion (C2H3O2-) bond together through ionic bonds, which involve the transfer of electrons.
Yes, it contains both. The sodium forms an ionic bond with the one oxygen with a single bond (not double) with the carbon, becoming the cation (positive charge). This oxygen and all other atoms in the acetate form covalent bonds.
Zinc acetate is an ionic compound. It is formed from the ionic bond between zinc cations (Zn2+) and acetate anions (CH3COO-).
Acetate ions have both ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between the positively charged cation and the negatively charged acetate ion is ionic, while the bonds within the acetate ion itself (between carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms) are covalent.
of course it is ionic what else could it be?
Sodium acetate is an ionic compound. It is composed of sodium ions (Na+) and acetate ions (CH3COO-) held together by ionic bonds resulting from the transfer of electrons between the atoms.
LiCH3COO contains both ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between lithium (Li) and acetate ion (CH3COO) is ionic, while the bonds within the acetate ion itself (between carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms) are covalent.
NaCH2CO2 is a compound, not a bond. It contains sodium (Na) which forms ionic bonds with the acetate ion (CH2CO2), which contains covalent bonds within the acetate group.