Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
Sulfur monochloride or sulphur monochloride (British English spelling).This would actually be disulfur dichloride. Because it would look like S2Cl2 for easier reading.
The compound SCl2 is called sulfur dichloride.
The balanced chemical equation for sulfur reacting with molecular chlorine to form sulfur dichloride is: S(s) + Cl2(g) → SCl2(l)
The covalent compound name for SCl2 is sulfur dichloride.
If this compound exists, it would be named "sulfur heptachloride".
The molecular compound SCI2 is called disulfur monochloride.
Sulfur monochloride or sulphur monochloride (British English spelling).This would actually be disulfur dichloride. Because it would look like S2Cl2 for easier reading.
The compound SCl2 is called sulfur dichloride.
The balanced chemical equation for sulfur reacting with molecular chlorine to form sulfur dichloride is: S(s) + Cl2(g) → SCl2(l)
The compound S2Cl2 is known as disulfur dichloride. It is a chemical compound made up of two sulfur atoms and two chlorine atoms, with a bent molecular structure.
The covalent compound name for SCl2 is sulfur dichloride.
The molecular compound for sulfur tetroxide is SO4.
Sulfur reacts with chlorine to form sulfur dichloride, which has the chemical formula SCl2.
If this compound exists, it would be named "sulfur heptachloride".
The chemical formula of sulfur dichloride is SCl2.
The chemical formula of sulfur dichloride is SCl2.
The covalent compound for S2Cl2 is disulfur dichloride. It consists of two sulfur atoms and two chlorine atoms bonded together through covalent bonds.