Iodine chloride is a covalent compound.
I2 is nonpolar covalent
Yes
No. They will make covalent compounds as in ICl or ICl3.
Covalent
The one that is ionic is KI, potassium iodide.
This completely depends on the compound it is forming. If the compound is NaCl for example, this is an example of ionic bonding (the difference between the larger electronegativity and higher electronegativity is above 1.9). If it's somthing like FCl for example, the bond is covalent (the difference between the larger electronegativity and higher electronegativity is below 1.9).
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
No. They will make covalent compounds as in ICl or ICl3.
Covalent
Yes, it is.
The one that is ionic is KI, potassium iodide.
This completely depends on the compound it is forming. If the compound is NaCl for example, this is an example of ionic bonding (the difference between the larger electronegativity and higher electronegativity is above 1.9). If it's somthing like FCl for example, the bond is covalent (the difference between the larger electronegativity and higher electronegativity is below 1.9).
Generally is called an interhalogen compound.
Iodine Pentachloride
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
No Its an ionic compound
A covalent compound, not ionic
Copper(II) sulfide is an ionic compound.
No, like all sodium (Na) compound it is ionic.