Yeah, an example is a radical anion that it creates (ketyl): Diphenylketyl
Na + Ph2CO →Na+Ph2CO−
Anhydrous H2CO3 (carbonic acid) is molecular, not ionic. It does not dissociate into ions in the absence of water.
Iron oxide is an ionic compound.
No, a brittle compound does not necessarily indicate it is a molecular compound. Brittle compounds can be either molecular or ionic, depending on their chemical bonding. Brittle molecular compounds typically have covalent bonds, while brittle ionic compounds have ionic bonds.
No, Fe2O3 is ionic
MgBr2 is an ionic compound (salt: magnesium bromide)
Benzene is a molecular compound because it consists of individual molecules held together by covalent bonds. It does not contain ions, so it is not considered ionic.
Molecular compound
Benzene is an organic chemical compound with the molecular formula C6H6.
H2O (Water) is a covalently bonded molecule.
Ionic Molecular
Nickel manganate is an ionic compound.
molecular, since it is an organic compound
molecular
Fluorine is molecular, but it is an element, not a compound.
C6H6, the formula for benzene, which is the simplest stable and electrically neutral aromatic compound.
You misunderstand. !!!! Magnesium is an ELEMENT. As an element it exists as atoms in a metallic lattice. When combined with another element e.g. oxygen as magnesium oxide, (MgO), then it is an ionically bonded molecular compound. Mg^(2+) + O^(2-) = MgO(s)
A molecular covalent compound