Ionic
Na2CO3 is an ionic compound. It is composed of sodium ions (Na+) and carbonate ions (CO3^2-) held together by ionic bonds.
Firstly, all ionic compounds and covalent compounds are very easy to tell apart. An ionic compound, simply put is a metal bonded to a nonmetal. And a covalent bond is a nonmetal bonded to a nonmetal. So Na2CO3 would be an ionic compound because Na(Sodium) is a metal and CO3(Carbonate) is a nonmetal. And by the way (if you wanted to know) a metal bonded to a metal is called a metallic bond :) Hope this helps
Sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) has ionic bonds, which form between the positively charged sodium ions and the negatively charged carbonate ions.
It is ionic
BaCl2 + Na2CO3 -> BaCO3 + 2NaCl
Na2CO3 is an ionic compound. It is composed of sodium ions (Na+) and carbonate ions (CO3^2-) held together by ionic bonds.
It contains both covalent and ionic bonds. In carbonate ion (CO32-) there are covalent bonds (C-O, C-O and C=O). Between carbonate ion (CO32-) and 2 sodium ions (Na-, Na-) there are ionic bonds. Na2CO3 is a salt.
Firstly, all ionic compounds and covalent compounds are very easy to tell apart. An ionic compound, simply put is a metal bonded to a nonmetal. And a covalent bond is a nonmetal bonded to a nonmetal. So Na2CO3 would be an ionic compound because Na(Sodium) is a metal and CO3(Carbonate) is a nonmetal. And by the way (if you wanted to know) a metal bonded to a metal is called a metallic bond :) Hope this helps
Is CsL ionic or covalent
The two main types of chemical bonds are ionic and covalent.
No, but the bond in sodium chloride is covalent.
Covalent
covalent
It is ionic
Sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) has ionic bonds, which form between the positively charged sodium ions and the negatively charged carbonate ions.
BaCl2 + Na2CO3 -> BaCO3 + 2NaCl
Covalent