No. Sodium fluoride is purely ionically bonded. Some other salts, most commonly those of oxyacids, such as sulfate, phosphate, and nitrate, are both covalently and ionically bonded
No, NaF contains ionic bonds. Ionic bonds are formed between the sodium (Na) cation and the fluoride (F) anion, in which electrons are transferred from sodium to fluorine. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms, which is not the case in NaF.
NaF is an ionic compound. It is composed of a metal cation (sodium, Na+) and a non-metal anion (fluoride, F-), which form a strong ionic bond due to the transfer of electrons from sodium to fluorine.
Bases can be both ionic and covalent in nature.
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
It is ionic
No, NaF contains ionic bonds. Ionic bonds are formed between the sodium (Na) cation and the fluoride (F) anion, in which electrons are transferred from sodium to fluorine. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms, which is not the case in NaF.
NaF is an ionic compound. It is composed of a metal cation (sodium, Na+) and a non-metal anion (fluoride, F-), which form a strong ionic bond due to the transfer of electrons from sodium to fluorine.
No "NaF" is Nonpolar covalent because 4.0 - 0.9 is in the Nonpolar covalent range.
No, nitrogen and fluorine will not form an ionic compound. They are both nonmetals and tend to form covalent bonds when they react with each other.
Yes it will form ionic bond (as in NaF or MgF2) or covalent bond as in F2 or ClF3)
CsBr is both polar and ionic, but is not covalent.
Bases can be both ionic and covalent in nature.
Ketchup is a mixture of many ingredients both ionic and covalent
Calcium has both ionic and covalent bonds.
It is ionic
Ionic and covalent bonds both result in a full outer electron shell.
I think so. Here covalent and there ionic.