The formula unit for the ionic compound made of strontium and sulfur is SrS, called strontium sulfide.
Sr(HS)2
Sr(H2Ar)
The chemical formula for strontium bromate is Sr(BrO3)2.
strontium is an alkali metal so always forms ionic bond with halogens as chlorine but 6 water molecules are attached through coordinate covalent bond with strotium but overall compound is consider as ionic compound.
No, lithium and strontium are both metals. Ionic compounds occur between metals and non-metals. They are both positively charged, so an ionic bond would not be attainable.
Strontium and iodine would form ionic bonds in a compound with formula SrI2.
It is ionic as are all strontium compounds.
K2S is the formula for the ionic compound formed from potassium and sulfur.
K2S is the formula for the ionic compound formed from potassium and sulfur.
If strontium and tellurium form an ionic compound it would be SrTe.
Strontium is an earth metal (element #38), and iodine is a halide non-metal (element #53), therefore they would form an ionic bond. Strontium ions have a +2 charge, and iodines -1, so to form a neutral-charged compound, we need 2 iodines for every Strontium, and the chemical formula would be: SrI2.
K2S is the formula for the ionic compound formed from potassium and sulfur.
ZnS
Rb2S====
Strontium chloride is an ionic compound.
Sodium and sulfur together in a compound represents a ionic bonds, because sodium is a metal and sulfur is a non-metal. The chemical formula for this compound would Na2S, and its name would be sodium sulfide.
ZnS
Strontium is in the second column of the Periodic table, therefore it naturally carries a 2+ charge... Oxygen is a Chalcogen so it naturally carries a 2- SrO
Strontium bromide is an ionic compound.