yes, because it describes the bonding of 2 elements
Sulfur and oxygen typically form a covalent bond when they combine to create compounds like sulfur dioxide (SO2) or sulfur trioxide (SO3).
The balanced equation for the reaction between SO3 and H2O is: SO3 + H2O → H2SO4
The are two elements in SO3: sulfur and oxygen.
SO3 stands for Sulfur Trioxide.
No. SO3 (sulfur trixoide) has trigonal planar geometry.
Sulfur trioxide
Covalent
SO3 is a covalently bonded compound. It consists of covalent bonds between sulfur and oxygen atoms.
Yes, $\ce{SO3}$ is considered a covalent compound rather than ionic. It forms covalent bonds between sulfur and oxygen atoms due to the sharing of electrons.
SO3 is a covalent compound because it is made up of nonmetal elements: sulfur and oxygen. Ionic bonds typically form between a metal and a nonmetal. In SO3, the sulfur and oxygen atoms share electrons to form covalent bonds.
SO3 forms a covalent bond. In sulfur trioxide (SO3), the sulfur and oxygen atoms share electrons to form covalent bonds, where electrons are shared between atoms to complete their outer electron shells.
Sulfur trioxide
SO3 forms covalent bonds, specifically double bonds between the sulfur atom and each of the oxygen atoms.
The compound SO3 is a type of covalent bond. It is a covalent bond because both sulfur and oxygen are nonmetals that are bonded.
SO3 does not have ionic bonds. It is a covalent compound, meaning that the sulfur and oxygen atoms share electrons to form chemical bonds. In SO3, sulfur forms three covalent bonds with each of the oxygen atoms.
SO3 is COVALENT. It is sulphur trioxide. and is used to make sulphuric acid. At STP it is a gas , and is dissolved in more sulphuric acid to make oleum (fuming sulphuric acid) ( H2S2O7). Oleum is 'NASTY' stuff. Oleum is then siddolved into water to form sulphuric acid. SO3 + H2SO4 = H2S2O7 H2S2O7 + H2O = 2H2SO4.
SO3 is a covalent compound. It consists of nonmetal elements (sulfur and oxygen) which typically form covalent bonds due to sharing of electrons between atoms.