no. it is a non-polar covalent molecule
F2 is neither ionic nor a compound, it is an element, fluorine, in the diatomic form.
No, F2 is covalent but it is an element, not a compound.
The oxidation number of fluorine in the fluorine molecule (F2) is 0. In a molecule composed of the same element (like F2), each atom has an oxidation number of 0.
Water is a polar molecule, not ionic.
Fluorine forms a molecule consisting of two fluorine atoms, which is symbolized as F2.
F2 is neither ionic nor a compound, it is an element, fluorine, in the diatomic form.
No, F2 is covalent but it is an element, not a compound.
The oxidation number of fluorine in the fluorine molecule (F2) is 0. In a molecule composed of the same element (like F2), each atom has an oxidation number of 0.
yep it is
Linear
The F-F bond (in F2) is covalent, and non polar covalent at that.
Water is a polar molecule, not ionic.
ionic bonding
Fluorine (atomic symbol F) is an element. In its pure form it is a gas: F2, a diatomic molecule.
If you mean F2 (fluorine), it is a diatomic molecule of the element fluorine. It's the common form of pure fluorine, since the halogen elements are all diatomic molecules.
no, ionic.
molecule