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.
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'.
Ionic bonding is present in KNO3. Potassium nitrate (KNO3) consists of positively charged potassium ions (K+) and negatively charged nitrate ions (NO3-), which are held together by electrostatic attractions.
Bases can be both ionic and covalent in nature.
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
It should be Ionic... Covalent Bonding - the name spell out the formula e.g Carbon dioxide, Silicon Tetra Chloride etc Ionic Compound - named by naming the ions they contain e.g Magnesium Sulfate, Sodium Chloride etc
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'.
Ionic bonding is present in KNO3. Potassium nitrate (KNO3) consists of positively charged potassium ions (K+) and negatively charged nitrate ions (NO3-), which are held together by electrostatic attractions.
The two main types of chemical bonds are ionic and covalent.
Potassium nitrate has ionic bonds.
Is CsL ionic or covalent
No, but the bond in sodium chloride is covalent.
Covalent
potassium nitrate
covalent
Covalent
Covalent
Covalent