Potassium nitrate is ionic.
Metal compounds tend to be ionic as metal atoms readily form positive ions. It consists of potassium (K+) ions (group 1 metals always form 1+ ions) and nitrate (NO3-) ions in a 1:1 ratio.
ionic
ionic
KNO3 (potassium nitrate) is made up of potassium (an alkali metal) and nitrogen and oxygen (which are both gasses or 'non-metals'). Ionic bonding is the bonding between a metal and a non-metal. This means that it is not covalent bonding but in fact 'ionic bonding'.
KNO3 is potassium nitrate. It is an IONIC compound which dissolved in water. CCl4 is tetrachloromethane, it is a COVALENT compound, which is misxible in organic solvents.
ionic
Ionic
covalent bond
KNO3 (potassium nitrate) is made up of potassium (an alkali metal) and nitrogen and oxygen (which are both gasses or 'non-metals'). Ionic bonding is the bonding between a metal and a non-metal. This means that it is not covalent bonding but in fact 'ionic bonding'.
KNO3 is potassium nitrate. It is an IONIC compound which dissolved in water. CCl4 is tetrachloromethane, it is a COVALENT compound, which is misxible in organic solvents.
YES!!! KNO3 can be divided into the ions 'K^(+)' and 'NO3(-)'. Within the anion 'NO3(-)' the nitrogen and oxygens are bonded covalently.
This is an ionic compound.
covalent bond
ionic
Ionic
It is ionic
A nonbinary ionic compound. Covalent bonds are molecular - nonmetal.
Is Ag3N covalent or ionic
Is CsL ionic or covalent
Covalent