Short answer both ionic and covalent! The bond between the sodium (metal) and phosphate (PO43-) (nonmetal) is ionic. The bonds between the phosphorous (nonmetal) and the oxygen (nonmetal) atoms are all covalent. The trick is to treat a covalent compound (PO43-, CO32-, etc) as grouped together when balancing charges, looking for ionic bonds, etc.
Cesium chloride is ionic as are all cesium compounds.
The binary ionic compound name for NaBr is sodium bromide.
Sodium chloride is an example of an ionic compound, formed by the reaction of a metal (sodium) with a non-metal (chlorine). It has a crystalline structure and is commonly known as table salt.
True. Sodium chloride is an ionic compound formed by the combination of sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-) ions through ionic bonding.
the answer is NaClO4 also known as sodium perchlorate
No such compound as Sodium Chlorine. If you mean sodium chloride, then it is an IONIC Crystalline compound.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is an ionic compound.
No Its an ionic compound
This compound is sodium hydroxide - NaOH.
it is a ionic compound becuase it involves a metal which is what an ionic comund is
Sodium chloride is an ionic compound.
It is an ionic compound.
The ionic compound name for NaC2H3O2 is sodium acetate.
This is sodium sulphate.
Sodium hydroxide has ionic bonds. A compound never is any kind of bond.
Yes, sodium dichromate is an ionic compound. It consists of sodium ions (Na+) and dichromate ions (Cr2O7^2-) held together by ionic bonds.
Na2O is Sodium Oxide.