Chlorine (Cl2) is not an ionic compound. It is a covalently bonded element. Chlorine can form ionic compounds like NaCl (Sodium Chloride) or CaCl2 (Calcium Chloride) but is not itself an ionic compound.
Yes, chlorine and potassium can form an ionic compound called potassium chloride. In this compound, potassium, which is a metal, donates its electron to chlorine, a nonmetal, to form an ionic bond.
Lithium combines with chlorine to form lithium chloride which is an ionic compound.
The ionic compound formed between aluminum and chlorine is aluminum chloride (AlCl3). In this compound, aluminum donates three electrons to each chlorine atom to form a stable ionic bond.
No, chlorine and xenon do not form an ionic compound. Xenon is a noble gas and does not readily form ionic bonds with other elements.
The ionic compound formed by combining sodium and chlorine is called sodium chloride.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
Chlorine gas (Cl2) is covalent.
Yes, chlorine and potassium can form an ionic compound called potassium chloride. In this compound, potassium, which is a metal, donates its electron to chlorine, a nonmetal, to form an ionic bond.
Lithium combines with chlorine to form lithium chloride which is an ionic compound.
The ionic compound formed between aluminum and chlorine is aluminum chloride (AlCl3). In this compound, aluminum donates three electrons to each chlorine atom to form a stable ionic bond.
No, chlorine and xenon do not form an ionic compound. Xenon is a noble gas and does not readily form ionic bonds with other elements.
The ionic compound formed by combining sodium and chlorine is called sodium chloride.
A compound containing sodium and chlorine in a binary ionic compound would be named sodium chloride.
no
Yes, the elements potassium and chlorine will react--very vigorously--to form the ionic compound potassium chloride.
No such compound as Sodium Chlorine. If you mean sodium chloride, then it is an IONIC Crystalline compound.
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).