H2O (water) is a covalent compound, as no metals are involved.
H2O is an ionic compound.
no, H2O is a covalent compound
Water, or H2O, is an Covalent compound.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
H2O, or water, is held together by polar covalent bonds. Covalent bonds are defined as a sharing of pairs of electrons between atoms. Ionic bonds are defined as a bond between metal and non-metal ions. There is no metal ion in an H2O compound because Hydrogen is a gas and Oxygen is a non-metal, so it cannot be an ionic bond.
The O-H bond is covalent.
No, H2O is covalent.
no, H2O is a covalent compound
Water, or H2O, is an Covalent compound.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent
Mg3P2 is ionic. the rest are covalent
H2O, or water, is held together by polar covalent bonds. Covalent bonds are defined as a sharing of pairs of electrons between atoms. Ionic bonds are defined as a bond between metal and non-metal ions. There is no metal ion in an H2O compound because Hydrogen is a gas and Oxygen is a non-metal, so it cannot be an ionic bond.
The O-H bond is covalent.
ionic - Sodium Chloride Covalent - Water ionic - Sodium Chloride Covalent - Water
H2O has a stronger bond then CaO because H2O is a covalent compound (made up of two nonmetals), whereas CaO is an ionic compound (made up of both a metal and nonmetal), and covalent bonds are stronger then ionic bonds.
H2O is a covalent compound with polar covalent bonds. In liquid water auto-ionisation takes placeH2O H+(aq) + OH-The dissocation is only very slight.
MgF2 and NaCl are ionic. NH3 and H2O contain polar covalent bonds. N2 contains non polar covalent bond.
H2O. Due to difference in electronegativity. O2 is covalent, NaCl and KI are ionic, CH4 is usually considered to be simply covalent as the electronegatiicty difference is small.