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.
Typically covalent (2 electron 2 center bonds). Note that diboarane B2H6 is sometimes drawn with B atoms bridged by H atoms. Each B-H-B bridge is a 3 center 2 electron bond.
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
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 Its an ionic compound
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
B2h6
The formula unit -NaCl - (not a molecule) contain two atoms.
Ionic covalent
it is covalent molecule