Group 15 elements generally form covalent compounds. However the two elements from group 15 nitrogen and phosphorus are known to form nitride (N3-) and phosphide (P3-) ions as in Na3N or Na3P.
The compound will be cesium fluoride (CsF)
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.
Barium bromide is an ionic compound. Barium (Ba) is a metal while bromine (Br) is a non-metal, resulting in the transfer of electrons from barium to bromine, forming an ionic bond between the two elements.
Zyban is not an ionic compound.
Metals form cations (positive ions).
No, it is not Ionic. An ionic compound is a metal and a nonmetal mixed together. If you look at the Periodic Table of elements, you will see that Nitrogen as well as iodine are nonmetals, therfore it cannot be an ionic compound.
Sr is the element strontium, which is an alkaline earth metal in Group 2 of the periodic table. This is not a compound.
The ionic radius of Mg2 is smaller than that of other ions in the same group on the periodic table.
One example of an ionic compound meeting these criteria is Ca(NO3)2, where the cation is Calcium with 20 electrons and the anion is nitrate (NO3-) consisting of nitrogen and oxygen, which are in the same group on the periodic table.
The compound will be cesium fluoride (CsF)
The ionic compound formed when cesium reacts with oxygen is cesium oxide (Cs2O). In this compound, cesium, a group 1 metal, donates its outer electron to oxygen, a group 16 nonmetal, to form a stable ionic bond.
X belongs to the tripositive group since the formula X3PO4 suggests that X has a +3 charge in the 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, methyl chloride is not an ionic compound. It is a covalent compound, meaning it is formed by sharing electrons between the carbon and hydrogen atoms in the methyl group, and the chlorine atom in the chloride group.
Yes, the relative positions of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in the periodic table agree with the theoretical prediction about the kind of compound they should form. Carbon and oxygen are in the same group and tend to form covalent compounds, while hydrogen typically forms compounds with other elements through ionic or covalent bonds. Sucrose, a compound made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, is a covalent compound in line with these predictions.
No Its an ionic compound
Because Group 13 elements form both ionic and covalent bonds readily.