As an element itself, iron (Fe) has no charge (neutral). As an ion (when combined with other elements), iron has a positive +2 charge (Iron II or Ferrous) in some compounds and a +3 charge (Iron III or Ferric) in other compounds. In general, metals are positive (see related link below).
FeCO3 contains both ionic and covalent bonds. The Fe-C bond is mainly covalent, as both atoms share electrons, while the Fe-O bond is ionic, as Fe donates electrons to O to form a bond.
FeBr3 is an ionic bond, as it forms between a metal (Fe) and a nonmetal (Br) resulting in the transfer of electrons from Fe to Br.
FeO is an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal and oxygen (O) is a non-metal, so they tend to form an ionic bond where Fe loses electrons to form Fe2+ cation and O gains electrons to form O2- anion.
Fe(NO3)2 is an ionic compound. Iron (Fe) is a metal and nitrate (NO3) is a polyatomic ion, so together they form an ionic bond in Fe(NO3)2.
Iron (Fe) and sulfur (S) will form an ionic bond, where Fe will donate electrons to sulfur to complete their outer electron shells.
FeCO3 contains both ionic and covalent bonds. The Fe-C bond is mainly covalent, as both atoms share electrons, while the Fe-O bond is ionic, as Fe donates electrons to O to form a bond.
FeBr3 is an ionic bond, as it forms between a metal (Fe) and a nonmetal (Br) resulting in the transfer of electrons from Fe to Br.
FeO is an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal and oxygen (O) is a non-metal, so they tend to form an ionic bond where Fe loses electrons to form Fe2+ cation and O gains electrons to form O2- anion.
Fe(NO3)2 is an ionic compound. Iron (Fe) is a metal and nitrate (NO3) is a polyatomic ion, so together they form an ionic bond in Fe(NO3)2.
Iron (Fe) and sulfur (S) will form an ionic bond, where Fe will donate electrons to sulfur to complete their outer electron shells.
FeCl3 contains an ionic bond. Iron (Fe) is a metal, which donates electrons to chlorine (Cl), a nonmetal, resulting in the formation of an ionic compound.
FeS is an ionic compound consisting of iron (Fe) cations and sulfide (S) anions. The bond between Fe and S is predominantly ionic, with Fe donating electrons to S to form ionic bonds.
It is ionic
Fe 2+and2Cl -Make FeCl2An ionic compound.
Yes, FeO is connected by an ionic bond. In FeO, iron (Fe) has a positive charge and oxygen (O) has a negative charge, leading to the formation of an ionic bond between the two elements.
No such molecule as 'FeOH'. It is either Fe(OH)2 or Fe(OH)3 The bond between iron(Fe) and the hydroxide ion (OH) is ionic. However the bond between the O & H in the hydroxide moiety is covalent. Fe(OH)2 = Fe^(2+) + (O-H)^(-) + (O-H)^(-) or shortenede down Fe^(2+) + 2(O-H)^(-)
An ionic bond will form between iron (Fe) and chlorine (Cl) since iron tends to lose electrons to become positively charged (Fe^3+) and chlorine tends to gain electrons to become negatively charged (Cl^-). This opposite charge attraction results in the formation of an ionic bond between Fe and Cl.