sodium cyanide
potassium chloride
potassium cyanide
Potassium fluoride itself is an ionic compound, although it should not be present in other ionic compounds.
Ammonia is a molecular compound and not ionic.
It is an Ionic compound (as far as i guess)
Lithium oxide is an ionic compound, further, all oxides of the group 1 elements are ionic.
Ionic.
yes
Well, the bond between carbon and nitrogen is covalent, whilst the bond between potassium and the cyanide is ionic.
Yes
Because KCN is a ionic compound but AgCN is covalent compound . So, when KCN is dissolved the we get K+ ion and CN_ ion then bonding takes place through carbon but in AgCN doesn't give ions so bond formation takes place form free side of AgCN or from nitrogen.
To answer this you need a roman numeral on gold to know the charge on it. Assuming it would be (I)... the formula would be KAu(CN)2
Ionic, between K+ and pi-bonded cyanide, CN-.
KCN is potassium cyanide.
A compound containing the ion cyan as: HCN, KCN, NaCN.
Well, the bond between carbon and nitrogen is covalent, whilst the bond between potassium and the cyanide is ionic.
An ionic compound is an example of a chemical compound.
No Its an ionic compound
A covalent compound, not ionic