The answer would be Sodium Chloride (NaCl)
Metals typically form cations after ionic bonding by losing electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration. This results in a positively charged ion due to the loss of electrons.
Mg is an ionic element. It typically forms cations by losing two electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration, making it an ionic element.
The element that forms the cation (positive ion) comes first in the formula for an ionic compound.
its A
HgBr is an ionic compound. Mercury (Hg) is a metal element that forms cations, while bromine (Br) is a non-metal element that forms anions. In an ionic compound like HgBr, the metal cation is positively charged and the non-metal anion is negatively charged, leading to electrostatic attraction between them.
It forms one, yes. The element in itself is not a bond.
Metals typically form cations after ionic bonding by losing electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration. This results in a positively charged ion due to the loss of electrons.
The ionic bonding in sodium chloride is much stronger than the internal bonding in either element that forms sodium chloride; therefore, the melting point of the salt is much higher than that of either element that forms the salt.
Mg is an ionic element. It typically forms cations by losing two electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration, making it an ionic element.
The element that forms the cation (positive ion) comes first in the formula for an ionic compound.
salt - ionic compoundwater - covalent polar compoundsalt water - solution
Bromine (Br) All nonmetals except the noble gasses will react with lithium to form ionic compounds.
In chemistry any salt is the ionic combination of positively charged element or molecule with a negatively charged element/molecule. Table salt, for instance, is Na+Cl- aka sodium chloride.
When non metals and metals are combined, the result is an ionic compound. Often, an ionic compound salt.
its A
Non metals generally form anions. They gain electrons during ionic bonding.
Li(I) lithium iodide is an ionic compound (salt)