FeAs2 is the most common arsenide (míneral lollingite) it is not ionic.
There are arsenide phases FeAs and Fe3As2 corresponding to iron(III) arsenide and iron (II) arsenide, again the bonding is not ionic.
The ionic compound Ca3As2 is called calcium arsenide.
The ionic compound for GaAs is gallium arsenide. Gallium (Ga) is a metal and arsenic (As) is a nonmetal, so they form an ionic bond where Ga becomes positively charged (Ga3+) and As becomes negatively charged (As3-).
Potassium arsenide is an ionic compound. It is formed by the combination of potassium, which donates an electron, and arsenic, which accepts it to form a stable ionic bond.
The formula for iron II arsenide is Fe3As2. This compound consists of 3 iron atoms bonded to 2 arsenic atoms.
Based on the given formula "ba3as2," which represents barium arsenide, it is an ionic compound. Barium is a metal and arsenic is a nonmetal, resulting in the transfer of electrons between the two elements to form ionic bonds.
The ionic compound Ca3As2 is called calcium arsenide.
The ionic compound for GaAs is gallium arsenide. Gallium (Ga) is a metal and arsenic (As) is a nonmetal, so they form an ionic bond where Ga becomes positively charged (Ga3+) and As becomes negatively charged (As3-).
Potassium arsenide is an ionic compound. It is formed by the combination of potassium, which donates an electron, and arsenic, which accepts it to form a stable ionic bond.
Iron oxide is an ionic compound.
Iron is not a compound, it is a metallic element.
FeO is Iron(II)oxide, archaically , Ferrous oxide. Do NOT confuse with Fe2O3, which is Iron(III)oxide ; Archaically Ferric oxide. The 'iron' atom is in different oxidation states for these two compounds. NB 'Fe' is the chemical symbol for 'Iron', and comes from Latin 'Ferrum' for iron.
The formula for iron II arsenide is Fe3As2. This compound consists of 3 iron atoms bonded to 2 arsenic atoms.
Ionic
Based on the given formula "ba3as2," which represents barium arsenide, it is an ionic compound. Barium is a metal and arsenic is a nonmetal, resulting in the transfer of electrons between the two elements to form ionic bonds.
The name for the ionic compound FeSO4 is Iron(II) sulfate.
Yes, iron and chlorine can form an ionic compound. When iron loses electrons to form Fe^3+ ions and chlorine gains electrons to form Cl^- ions, they can combine to form the ionic compound iron(III) chloride (FeCl3).
Fe(NO3)2 is an ionic compound. It consists of iron (Fe) ions and nitrate (NO3-) ions held together by ionic bonds.