Ionic
Barium sulfide contains an ionic bond, with barium (Ba) donating electrons to sulfur (S) to form a stable crystal lattice structure.
Two electrons are transferred to sulfur from barium to form barium sulfide.
An ionic bond would occur between sulfur and barium.
i think it is BaF2
Barium and tin can form an ionic bond where barium, a metal, transfers electrons to tin, a metalloid. This creates a bond where barium becomes positively charged as it loses electrons and tin becomes negatively charged as it gains electrons.
barium
An ionic bond forms between barium and oxygen.
Ionic
Barium has a larger atomic radius than tin.
Barium sulfide contains an ionic bond, with barium (Ba) donating electrons to sulfur (S) to form a stable crystal lattice structure.
Barium selenide is an ionic bond. Barium, a metal, donates electrons to selenide, a non-metal, forming positively charged barium ions and negatively charged selenide ions which are attracted to each other.
Tin is in group 14, the others are all in group 2.
Barium can bond easily with oxygen and the halogens family(row 17)
Two electrons are transferred to sulfur from barium to form barium sulfide.
An ionic bond would occur between sulfur and barium.
Tin typically forms ionic bonds with oxygen to create tin oxide compounds, such as tin(II) oxide (SnO) or tin(IV) oxide (SnO2). In these compounds, tin donates its electrons to oxygen, resulting in a positively charged tin ion and a negatively charged oxygen ion, which are then attracted to each other by electrostatic forces to form the bond.