yes
Sulfur is a reactive element; the Pauling electronegativity is 2,58.
Sulfur can make 6 bonds because it has 6 valence electrons available for bonding with other atoms. This allows sulfur to form multiple bonds with other elements, increasing its bonding capacity.
Yes, sulfur can exceed the octet rule in chemical bonding by expanding its valence shell to accommodate more than eight electrons.
The bonding between Sulfur (S) and Chlorine (Cl) would be expected to be a covalent bond. In covalent bonding, atoms share electrons to achieve a full outer shell and form a stable molecule, as is the case with sulfur and chlorine in molecules like sulfur dichloride (SCl2).
The S-H bond is categorized as a polar covalent bond due to the electronegativity difference between sulfur and hydrogen. Sulfur is more electronegative than hydrogen, causing the shared electrons to be closer to sulfur, resulting in a partial negative charge on sulfur and a partial positive charge on hydrogen.
Magnesium is the cation and sulfur is the anion.
Magnesium will form a positive ion during ionic bonding. It will lose 2 electrons to achieve a stable octet configuration, resulting in a 2+ ion. Sulfur typically forms a negative ion by gaining 2 electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Rarely if ever would sulfur become a cation or positive ion before bonding. Sulfur already has 6 electrons in the valence shell or outermost energy level (outer most orbital(s) formed by the electron's motion in space). This means Sulfur will want to gain 2 electrons to become a negative ion, become stable and fill the valence shell with 8 electrons (the goal of all elements on the periodic table in groups 1-2 & 13 - 17, where groups 1, 2, 13 & sometimes 14 will lose 1, 2, 3, & sometime 4 electrons respectively to become stable and 14-17 will gain 4, 3, 2, & 1 electrons respectively to become stable or lower in energy). Sulfur can share electrons with other nonmetals which may be able to pull those shared electrons closer to itself (such as fluorine - the element in the groups discussed above that exhibits the greatest ability to attract electrons to itself properly called the most electronegative element) causing sulfur to take on a partial positive charge indicated by the Greek symbol delta+ but it will not display a full positive charge.
Sulfur has covalent bonds with nonmetals.
Covalent Bonding
The bonding is covalent.
No
Sulfur is a reactive element; the Pauling electronegativity is 2,58.
Sulfur can make 6 bonds because it has 6 valence electrons available for bonding with other atoms. This allows sulfur to form multiple bonds with other elements, increasing its bonding capacity.
yes sulfur is positive ion
Yes, sulfur can exceed the octet rule in chemical bonding by expanding its valence shell to accommodate more than eight electrons.
The bonding between Sulfur (S) and Chlorine (Cl) would be expected to be a covalent bond. In covalent bonding, atoms share electrons to achieve a full outer shell and form a stable molecule, as is the case with sulfur and chlorine in molecules like sulfur dichloride (SCl2).