ionic
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
Phosphorus and iodine form a covalent bond. In covalent bonds, atoms share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
PF is a covalent compound. It consists of a polar covalent bond between the atoms phosphorus and fluorine.
No sulfur and fluorine are both nonmetals so they would join with covalent bonds
Phosphorus and chlorine can form an ionic bond to create phosphorus trichloride (PCl3) or a covalent bond to create phosphorus pentachloride (PCl5), depending on the reaction conditions.
Phosphorus pentoxide is a covalent bond, not a ionic. -Emiko Bunny
Phosphorus and iodine form a covalent bond. In covalent bonds, atoms share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Covalent because it has Tri as a prefix and it shares electrons.
PF is a covalent compound. It consists of a polar covalent bond between the atoms phosphorus and fluorine.
No sulfur and fluorine are both nonmetals so they would join with covalent bonds
Phosphorus and chlorine can form an ionic bond to create phosphorus trichloride (PCl3) or a covalent bond to create phosphorus pentachloride (PCl5), depending on the reaction conditions.
no, they form covalent bond as the difference in electronegativity between P and H is below 1.7
The bond between P and H is covalent, eg in PH3
Neither. It is hydrogeneous.
Boron trifluoride (BF3) is a covalent compound. It forms covalent bonds between the boron atom and each of the fluorine atoms by sharing electrons. The fluorine atoms each contribute one electron to the bond, resulting in a stable structure.
PCl5 is covalent in the vapour phase with a trigonal biyramidal shape. It is ionic in the solid consisting of PCl4+ PCl6- In solution it can be covalent or ionic depending on the solvent.
Covalent- the small difference in electronegativity is the reason.