Dinitrogen tetroxide is a molecular compound because it consists of covalently bonded nitrogen atoms. It is composed of N2O4 molecules.
No, dinitrogen teroxide (N2O4) is a molecular compound, not a binary ionic compound. Binary ionic compounds are formed between a metal and a nonmetal through the transfer of electrons, while molecular compounds result from the sharing of electrons between nonmetals.
Molecular. (Molecular and covalent compounds are the same).
CS2 - Carbon disulfide: covalent compound BaI2 - Barium iodide: ionic compound N2O4 - Dinitrogen tetroxide: covalent compound PCl3 - Phosphorus trichloride: covalent compound
I had this same question; because dinitrogen tetroxide has 2 Nitrogen & oxygen atoms, I wrote that it is covalent. My reasoning was that it doesn't combine negative and positive charges, both nitrogen and oxygen have negative charges.
BaI2 is ionic. Rest are covalent compounds.
No, dinitrogen teroxide (N2O4) is a molecular compound, not a binary ionic compound. Binary ionic compounds are formed between a metal and a nonmetal through the transfer of electrons, while molecular compounds result from the sharing of electrons between nonmetals.
It doesn't N2O4 is a covalent compound
Molecular. (Molecular and covalent compounds are the same).
CS2 - Carbon disulfide: covalent compound BaI2 - Barium iodide: ionic compound N2O4 - Dinitrogen tetroxide: covalent compound PCl3 - Phosphorus trichloride: covalent compound
I had this same question; because dinitrogen tetroxide has 2 Nitrogen & oxygen atoms, I wrote that it is covalent. My reasoning was that it doesn't combine negative and positive charges, both nitrogen and oxygen have negative charges.
quite obviously covalent. ionic implies there is non gases. Are you even paying attention lol..
Formula: N2O3
Molecular compound
BaI2 is ionic. Rest are covalent compounds.
There is no compound named dinitrogen dioxide. However, every oxide of nitrogen is a covalent compound.
H2O is a molecular compound.
Ionic Molecular