Ammonium ion is polar due to the ionic bonds present in the polyatomic ion.
It is ionic.
Ammonium Fluoride is polar.
No, it is a non metallic complex ion but it forms salts (Ionic compounds) just like metallic ions.
POLAR
Ammonium chloride is polar, it dissolves in water.
It is ionic.
NH4, or ammonium is an ion. Ions cannot be polar or nonpolar because they must be parts of larger ionic compounds. The compound would be polar.
There are two types of bonding in ammonium sulphate. In ammonium ion, ntrogen and hydrogen are bonded by covalent bonds (intermolecular / Van Der Waals forces) as both of the elements are non-metals. Between ammonium and sulphate, both ions, they are joined together by ionic bonds.
Neither. Magnesium sulphate is ionic; individually the sulphate ion is polar.
Polyatomic ion ammonium is the exception. When some non-metals contain polyatomic ion ammonium and mix with a metal/metalliod and some times even non-metals the reaction is ionic.
Ammonium Fluoride is polar.
CO3^2- , the carbonate anion, consists of covalent bonds between the carbon atom and the 3 oxygen atoms. As an ion, it is polar. However, when combined with a metal atom, such as sodium, it forms an ionic compound.
No, it is a non metallic complex ion but it forms salts (Ionic compounds) just like metallic ions.
Copper is a single element so it is nonpolar. A polar substance forms when two or more elements with different electronegativities bond form a compound.
POLAR
Ammonium chloride is polar, it dissolves in water.
ionic