the answer is c.0
The bonding in calcium fluoride (not "flouride") is ionic, not covalent.
CaF2, Calcium Fluoride. It is useful in iron smelting
Ammonium fluoride is an Ionic Compound.
The reason it becomes stable is because Ca has 2 valence electrons that it wants to get rid of to become stable. F has 7 valence electrons and wants 1 more to become stable. So, TWO F atoms each take 1 of the 2 electrons from Ca. They form an ionic bond as Ca^2+ and 2F^- to make CaF2.
Potassium fluoride itself is an ionic compound, although it should not be present in other ionic compounds.
The net charge of an ionic compound is equivalent to zero.
Calcium fluoride is an ionic compound.
The net charge of an ionic compound is equivalent to zero.
Calcium Fluoride
CaF2 is calcium fluoride.
Calcium fluoride is an example of an ionic compound, not a covalent compound. Covalent compounds form between two nonmetals, while ionic compounds form between a metal and a nonmetal.
Yes. Fluorite is calcium fluoride, which is an ionic compound.
The bonding in calcium fluoride (not "flouride") is ionic, not covalent.
Zero. The net charge of a compound is always zero.
CaF2, Calcium Fluoride. It is useful in iron smelting
Fluoride anions must equal a 2- charge.
Calcium fluoride has ionic bonds.