Sulfur can form ionic compounds (eg SO2), but Xenon is a noble gas and does not react to form compounds.
The difference in electronegativity between sulfur and oxygen is not sufficient to form ionic bonds.
Yes; these elements can form an ionic compound named calcium sulfide, with formula CaS.
Xenon is a noble gas in with the electrone of outermost orbit are balanced than the xenon cannot make ionic bond with another element such as Oxygen because if it make an ionic bond than the electron of the outer most orbit are unstable therefore it make an covalent bond with oxygen to fill the outer most unbalance electron of oxygen by sharing electron to form (xenon oxide) (xenon dioxide) and also with floride to form (xenon difloride) etc.
Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
Because lithium form a cation and sulfur an anion the lithium sulfide (Li2S) form an ionic compound, a salt.
The compounds in the system nitrogen-sulfur are not ionic.
Sulfur can form both ionic and covalent compounds. For example, sulfur dioxide is a covalent compound whereas sulfides of metals are ionic compounds.
Yes, Potassium is a metal, specifically an alkali metal, and sulfur is a nonmetal. The alkali metals will form ionic bonds with nonmetals, including sulfur. Potassium and sulfur will form potassium sulfide, K2S.
The difference in electronegativity between sulfur and oxygen is not sufficient to form ionic bonds.
Yes; these elements can form an ionic compound named calcium sulfide, with formula CaS.
Xenon is a noble gas in with the electrone of outermost orbit are balanced than the xenon cannot make ionic bond with another element such as Oxygen because if it make an ionic bond than the electron of the outer most orbit are unstable therefore it make an covalent bond with oxygen to fill the outer most unbalance electron of oxygen by sharing electron to form (xenon oxide) (xenon dioxide) and also with floride to form (xenon difloride) etc.
Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
Because lithium form a cation and sulfur an anion the lithium sulfide (Li2S) form an ionic compound, a salt.
The reaction of chlorine and sulfur can give a few different products, each of which is considered to have covalent rather than ionic bonding.
Metal, like sodium.
Sodium and sulfur form an ionic bond.
A sulfur atom tends to gain two electrons.