Carbon tetrachloride is a covalent compound.
Carbon tetrachloride contains covalent bonds. (A compound is not itself a "bond" of any kind.)
Despite the fact that the name contains 'chloride', it is NOT ionic: there are only (4) covalent bonds in it. The systematic name is tetrachloromethane.
Carbon tetrachloride is a covalent compound.
Carbon tetrachloride, CCl4, is molecular because the elements are non-metals. Non-metals bond by means of covalent bonding, forming molecules.
It is a covalent compound.
No, it contains only covalent bonds.
no, it is a covalent compound.
yes
Covalent
CCl4 carbon tetrachloride
CCl4 is carbon tetrachloride. It is covalently bonded.
Carbon tetrachloride is CCl4. It is covalent.
CCl4 = All bonds are polar covalent. CaBr2 = ionic bond
No carbon tetrachloride is not an ionic crystal, it is a liquid.
Carbon tetrachloride is a covalent bond.
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond, carbon tetrachloride has a covalent bond.
CCl4 carbon tetrachloride
CCl4 is carbon tetrachloride. It is covalently bonded.
Carbon tetrachloride is CCl4. It is covalent.
CCl4 = All bonds are polar covalent. CaBr2 = ionic bond
No carbon tetrachloride is not an ionic crystal, it is a liquid.
Carbon tetrachloride is covalent.
carbon tetrachloride is a molecular compound
CCl4 is nonpolar.
No. It is an example of a metallic covalent bond
Titanium tetrachloride has ionic bonds.