sodium chloride
carbon forms only covalent bond.It shares its electrons with some other element. Ex. CH4 methane
Carbon has four valence electrons and to for am ionic compound, carbon should lose all the four electrons. This needs high ionisation energy and hence carbon generally shares electrons and forms covalent compounds. However carbon does form ionic compounds as in metal carbides.
Is this a trick question? Carbon forms four covalent bonds Carbon is sometimes ionic - e.g. in the alkali metal carbides Carbon can bond to itself- Carbon forms long chains- the best of all the elements Carbon is found in all organic molecules by definition. the least well known characteristic is ionic where it forms the ions C4-, C22-, C34-
Both. The sulfur ion consists of one atom of sulfur and four of oxygen; because it does not have enough electrons to complete the octet rule for oxygen, it must use electrons from another source, whose charges are not balanced within the ion. The sulfur then forms six covalent bonds with oxygen: two double bond pairs, two single bond pairs. This causes the oxygen atoms with the extra electron to become negatively charged: The zinc ion forms an ionic bond with them and completes the compound.
Carbon atoms usually form four covalent bonds in carbon compounds. In some kinds of compounds, however, carbon forms a type of bond called "double" or "triple", in which carbon atoms share two (in double bonds) or three (in triple bonds) electrons from each carbon atom in the bond. In such instances it would be preferable to say that each carbon atom in one or more carbon to carbon bonds shares four electrons, rather than forms four bonds. Carbon only rarely if ever forms ionic bonds to another atom, but may do so in alkali metal and alkaline earth metal carbides.
carbon forms only covalent bond.It shares its electrons with some other element. Ex. CH4 methane
Carbon normally forms four covalent bonds in its compounds, not ionic bonds.
A optically active compound should have atleast one carbon atom attached to four different groups. glycine is not active because it has carbon atom attached to 2 hydrogen atoms , 1 amino group and 1 carboxylic group
Alanine Glycine Phenyl alanine Argenine Histidine Tyrosine
Carbon has four valence electrons and to for am ionic compound, carbon should lose all the four electrons. This needs high ionisation energy and hence carbon generally shares electrons and forms covalent compounds. However carbon does form ionic compounds as in metal carbides.
ionic compound in four types....ions contains...
It is a quadra-peptide made from the four amino acids: glycine - phenylalanine - leucine & valine.
Is this a trick question? Carbon forms four covalent bonds Carbon is sometimes ionic - e.g. in the alkali metal carbides Carbon can bond to itself- Carbon forms long chains- the best of all the elements Carbon is found in all organic molecules by definition. the least well known characteristic is ionic where it forms the ions C4-, C22-, C34-
Both. The sulfur ion consists of one atom of sulfur and four of oxygen; because it does not have enough electrons to complete the octet rule for oxygen, it must use electrons from another source, whose charges are not balanced within the ion. The sulfur then forms six covalent bonds with oxygen: two double bond pairs, two single bond pairs. This causes the oxygen atoms with the extra electron to become negatively charged: The zinc ion forms an ionic bond with them and completes the compound.
Carbon atoms usually form four covalent bonds in carbon compounds. In some kinds of compounds, however, carbon forms a type of bond called "double" or "triple", in which carbon atoms share two (in double bonds) or three (in triple bonds) electrons from each carbon atom in the bond. In such instances it would be preferable to say that each carbon atom in one or more carbon to carbon bonds shares four electrons, rather than forms four bonds. Carbon only rarely if ever forms ionic bonds to another atom, but may do so in alkali metal and alkaline earth metal carbides.
The four most common forms of precipitation are;rainsleetsnowand hail
I know Ionic and Covalent are two of them.