Covalent.
FeNi is an intermetallic compound with a metallic bond. In this case, the bond between iron (Fe) and nickel (Ni) is considered metallic rather than ionic or covalent.
No. A bond cannot be both covalent and ionic. A bond can be covalent, ionic or metallic. In covalent bonding electrons are shared, electrons are transferred in ionic bonding and electrons move about in a sea of electrons in metallic bonds.
Gold's chemical bond type is metallic, not covalent or ionic. In metallic bonding, electrons are delocalized and free to move throughout the material, creating properties such as malleability and high thermal and electrical conductivity typical of metals like gold.
Yes that is all it contains there for it to be ionic or metallic the bond would have to have a metal for ionic and more than 2 elements for metallic composed of metals
The three types of chemical bonds are Ionic bonds, Covalent bonds, and Metallic bonds.Three types of chemical bonds include the ionic bond, the covalent bond, and metallic bond. Ionic occur between oppositely charged ions, covalent bonds occure when atoms share electrons. Metallic bonds form in metals. Basicaly, in metals, the atoms of each metal share their electrons in a "sea of electrons."
Covalent, Ionic and Metallic bond
FeNi is an intermetallic compound with a metallic bond. In this case, the bond between iron (Fe) and nickel (Ni) is considered metallic rather than ionic or covalent.
No. A bond cannot be both covalent and ionic. A bond can be covalent, ionic or metallic. In covalent bonding electrons are shared, electrons are transferred in ionic bonding and electrons move about in a sea of electrons in metallic bonds.
Types of intramolecular bonds: ionic, covalent, metallic.
ICl3 is covalent N2O is covalent LiCl is ionic
metallic bond is present in KCL because all metal have metallic bond.
ionic bond covalent bond metallic bond coordinate bond
Copper Chloride is an ionic bond. So, no. It isn't a covalent bond. :)
ionic bond covalent bond metallic bond coordinate bond
Covalent, Metallic, and Ionic crystals have high melting points and densities, but molecular crystals tend to be soft and has a lower melting point. Covalent crystal=covalent bond and Ionic crystal=ionic bond.
Gold's chemical bond type is metallic, not covalent or ionic. In metallic bonding, electrons are delocalized and free to move throughout the material, creating properties such as malleability and high thermal and electrical conductivity typical of metals like gold.
Yes that is all it contains there for it to be ionic or metallic the bond would have to have a metal for ionic and more than 2 elements for metallic composed of metals