Ca (calcium) is an element, not a compound. and it can only form ionic compounds.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
C2F6 ( hexafluoro ethane) (F3C-CF3)is a covalent compound.
No, carbon monoxide is not an ionic compound. It is a covalent compound formed by the sharing of electrons between carbon and oxygen atoms.
Methane is a covalent compound: CH4. Also nitrogen oxide, NO.
Nitrogen trichloride is a covalent compound.
This is a covalent compound. S-Cl bond is covalent.
No, CaS (calcium sulfide) is not a covalent bond. It is an ionic bond, formed between calcium (a metal) and sulfur (a nonmetal) resulting in the transfer of electrons from calcium to sulfur.
a covalent compound has protons and electrons
Only in the acid (-COOH) and hydroxy (=C-O-H) group the bonds are polar, all others are covalent.
CaS is an ionic compound. Calcium (Ca) is a metal and sulfur (S) is a nonmetal, so they bond together through ionic bonding where electrons are transferred from calcium to sulfur, creating charged ions that are held together by electrostatic forces.
It is a molecular (covalent) compound. Present day text books refer to a covalent compound as a molecular compound, as opposed to an ionic one.
The compound formed from calcium (Ca) and sulfur (S) is calcium sulfide (CaS). The formula for calcium sulfide is CaS.
The formula of the compound made by combining calcium with sulfur is CaS, which is known as calcium sulfide.
i think it it covalent
Atoms in a covalent compound share the electrons.
A covalent compound
The covalent compound for As2O5 is diarsenic pentoxide.