It forms a covalent bond.
Yes. Nitrogen and phosphorus would form a covalent bond.
Yes, they form an ionic bond.
Fluorine gains an electron. Fluorine is very reactive and will form bonds.
Potassium and fluorine will form an ionic bond
fluorine and silicon form a perdominately ionic bond. fluorine is a nonmetal and silicon is a metal.
A phosphorus atom gains three electrons to form a phosphide anion when forming a chemical bond to a metal.
As the electronegativity difference between phosphorus and fluorine is less than 1.7 according to Pauling's Scale, they cannot form an ionic bond.
All of the metallic elements will form an ionic bond with fluorine.
Yes, fluorine can form a non polar bond, only with another fluorine atom, in fact fluorine gas.
Yes. Nitrogen and phosphorus would form a covalent bond.
Yes, they form an ionic bond.
Fluorine gains an electron. Fluorine is very reactive and will form bonds.
Potassium and fluorine will form an ionic bond
Nonpolar covalent.
fluorine and silicon form a perdominately ionic bond. fluorine is a nonmetal and silicon is a metal.
Carbon and fluorine are both non metals. When they form a chemical bond they share electrons making this a covalent bond.
The bond between Ag ,silver and phosphate is the ionic bond, but within phosphate ion oxygen and phosphorus form covalent bond ( one oxygen bond is coordinate covalent).