Calcium chloride is a compound, not a chemical element.
Nails are metal.
it can be a metal or nonmetal or metalliods
nonmetal
Sodium (metal) reacts with chlorine (nonmetal) to form sodium chloride. Magnesium (metal) reacts with oxygen (nonmetal) to form magnesium oxide. Aluminum (metal) reacts with sulfur (nonmetal) to form aluminum sulfide. Lithium (metal) reacts with nitrogen (nonmetal) to form lithium nitride. Potassium (metal) reacts with fluorine (nonmetal) to form potassium fluoride. Calcium (metal) reacts with phosphorus (nonmetal) to form calcium phosphide. Barium (metal) reacts with iodine (nonmetal) to form barium iodide. Titanium (metal) reacts with carbon (nonmetal) to form titanium carbide. Iron (metal) reacts with chlorine (nonmetal) to form iron(III) chloride. Zinc (metal) reacts with sulfur (nonmetal) to form zinc sulfide.
Uranium is a metal, rather than a nonmetal, or metalloid.
Calcium Chloride is an ionic compound. You see, for a substance to be classified as either a non-metal or a metal, it has to be in elemental form. Calcium Chloride is a compound, so you can't say whether it is a non-metal or a metal. However, of the elements that make up this compound, Calcium is a metal and Chlorine is a non-metal.
No, CaCl2 is not an example of ionic bonding. It is an ionic compound resulting from the bonding between calcium (a metal) and chlorine (a nonmetal). Ionic bonding occurs between a metal and a nonmetal, where electrons are transferred from one atom to another to form ions.
Calcium chloride is a compound between a metal and nonmetal. The difference in electronegativity between these elements is great. Therefore, CaCl2 is an ionic compound with ionic bonds
Nails are metal.
Metal is metal. Nonmetal is everything else.
Is ceramic metal or nonmetal
Metal - metal compounds don't exist... Only metal-nonmetal and nonmetal-nonmetal
it can be a metal or nonmetal or metalliods
Tantalum is a metal.
nonmetal
nonmetal
nonmetal