B2H6 is a covalent molecule. It consists of covalent bonds between boron and hydrogen atoms, sharing electrons to form the molecule.
The oxidation number for boron in B2H6 is +3, and the oxidation number for hydrogen is -1. Each boron atom has an oxidation number of +3, and each hydrogen atom has an oxidation number of -1 in the B2H6 molecule.
Water is a polar molecule, not ionic.
You misunderstand between Ionic & Molecular. A molecule can be either an ionic molecule or a covalent molecule. A molecule is a given substance. Ionic/Covalent is the type of bonding with in that molecule. 'Agi' Never heard of it. If you mean 'AgI'. (silver iodide). Then it is an ionically bonded molecule. Ag^(+) + I^(-) = AgI(s) NB Single letter elemental symbols are always a CAPITAL letter. Iodine/Iodide is 'I' NOT 'i'.
No, F2 is a covalent molecule composed of two fluorine atoms sharing electrons to form a non-ionic bond. In an ionic molecule, the atoms transfer electrons to form charged ions that are held together by electrostatic forces.
Boron hexahydride
The oxidation number for boron in B2H6 is +3, and the oxidation number for hydrogen is -1. Each boron atom has an oxidation number of +3, and each hydrogen atom has an oxidation number of -1 in the B2H6 molecule.
Water is a polar molecule, not ionic.
no, ionic.
molecule
No Its an ionic compound
B2h6
You misunderstand between Ionic & Molecular. A molecule can be either an ionic molecule or a covalent molecule. A molecule is a given substance. Ionic/Covalent is the type of bonding with in that molecule. 'Agi' Never heard of it. If you mean 'AgI'. (silver iodide). Then it is an ionically bonded molecule. Ag^(+) + I^(-) = AgI(s) NB Single letter elemental symbols are always a CAPITAL letter. Iodine/Iodide is 'I' NOT 'i'.
No, F2 is a covalent molecule composed of two fluorine atoms sharing electrons to form a non-ionic bond. In an ionic molecule, the atoms transfer electrons to form charged ions that are held together by electrostatic forces.
A molecule. You can have ionic or covalently bound atoms in a molecule. An example of ionic is NaCl, and of covalent is CO2
Ionic covalent
it is covalent molecule
The formula unit -NaCl - (not a molecule) contain two atoms.