NO!!! By Covalent bonding.
CaO because Ca is a metal and O is a gas and all the other possibillities are gasses combined and ionic has a metal and gas combination if you look at the periodic table of elements the right side is gases but they are determined by like a staircase and the rest are metals
Chlorine typically forms covalent bonds when it reacts with other elements. In its elemental form (Cl2), chlorine atoms share electrons to form a covalent bond. However, when chlorine reacts with metals, it can also form ionic bonds by gaining an electron to become a chloride ion. So, chlorine can exhibit both covalent and ionic bonding depending on the specific chemical reaction it is involved in.
The chlorine molecule is formed by two chlorine atoms. Any compound which is formed by the same non metal element is expected to be covalent.
Chlorine, Cl2 is covalent. Any molecules which consist of two atoms of the same element must be covalent. In compounds with other elements chlorine can form ionic or covalent compounds.
There are two types of bonding in ammonium sulphate. In ammonium ion, ntrogen and hydrogen are bonded by covalent bonds (intermolecular / Van Der Waals forces) as both of the elements are non-metals. Between ammonium and sulphate, both ions, they are joined together by ionic bonds.
CaO because Ca is a metal and O is a gas and all the other possibillities are gasses combined and ionic has a metal and gas combination if you look at the periodic table of elements the right side is gases but they are determined by like a staircase and the rest are metals
NaCl is an ionic solid with a high boiling point. Cl2 is held together by weak dispersion forces and is a gas at room temperature. That means Cl2 has already boiled and formed a gas at a temperature lower than room temperature.
Chlorine typically forms covalent bonds when it reacts with other elements. In its elemental form (Cl2), chlorine atoms share electrons to form a covalent bond. However, when chlorine reacts with metals, it can also form ionic bonds by gaining an electron to become a chloride ion. So, chlorine can exhibit both covalent and ionic bonding depending on the specific chemical reaction it is involved in.
Cl2 is covalent. NaCl is ionic.
The chlorine molecule is formed by two chlorine atoms. Any compound which is formed by the same non metal element is expected to be covalent.
Cl2 is a covalently bonded molecule because it is composed of two nonmetal atoms that share electrons. Air is a mixture of gases, with nitrogen and oxygen being the main components, and these are also covalently bonded molecules. Neon is a noble gas and exists as individual atoms, not molecules. Salt is an ionic compound composed of a metal and a nonmetal held together by ionic bonds.
Chlorine, Cl2 is covalent. Any molecules which consist of two atoms of the same element must be covalent. In compounds with other elements chlorine can form ionic or covalent compounds.
There are two types of bonding in ammonium sulphate. In ammonium ion, ntrogen and hydrogen are bonded by covalent bonds (intermolecular / Van Der Waals forces) as both of the elements are non-metals. Between ammonium and sulphate, both ions, they are joined together by ionic bonds.
Table salt also known as sodium chloride or NaCl is an example of ionic bonding as the ions Na+ and Cl- react in the equation: 2 Na(s) + Cl2(g) 2 NaCl(s), in which 2 moles solid Sodium and 1 mole of Chlorine react to form the solid product NaCl in effect.
Covalent bonding exists in the Cl2 molecule. Each chlorine atom shares one electron with the other to form a single covalent bond between them.
"I believe it is Ionic." Whoever said this is wrong, it's covalent (they share an electron from each atom to stabillise themselves) with an instantaneous dipole induced dipole intermolecular force.
Chlorine gas (Cl2) is covalent.