Covalent
I'm not sure what you mean by "purely covalent", since the ionic-vs-covalent distinction is expressed in terms of electronegativity, which can take a range of values (higher values = more ionic). CO is very much a covalent compound though.
No, carbon monoxide (CO) does not have ionic bonds. It is a covalent compound where the carbon and oxygen atoms share electrons to form a stable molecule.
Co, carbon monoxide, is covalent. Two non-metals, difference in electronegativity mkes the bond polar.
Covalent
The ionic compound for CO is carbon monoxide.
No, it is covalent.
I'm not sure what you mean by "purely covalent", since the ionic-vs-covalent distinction is expressed in terms of electronegativity, which can take a range of values (higher values = more ionic). CO is very much a covalent compound though.
CO is a molecular compound. It consists of a covalent bond between carbon and oxygen atoms.
No, carbon monoxide (CO) does not have ionic bonds. It is a covalent compound where the carbon and oxygen atoms share electrons to form a stable molecule.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
is carbon an tretaflouride ionic or covalent compound
Covalent; 2 non-metals bonded are covalent; a metal and a non-metal are ionic
What I had found is that it is an Ionic compound
Co, carbon monoxide, is covalent. Two non-metals, difference in electronegativity mkes the bond polar.
Covalent
Ionic Compound.
It is an ionic compound.