Nonmetals bonding with other nonmetals most often result in covalent bonds.
The outer electrons of a metal atom that bonds with a nonmetal atom are either transferred to the nonmetal to form an ionic bond or shared with the nonmetal to form one or more covalent bonds.
a reaction happens
it gets bigger!
it will form a new life or baby
metal--> nonmetal --> metalloid
The outer electrons of a metal atom that bonds with a nonmetal atom are either transferred to the nonmetal to form an ionic bond or shared with the nonmetal to form one or more covalent bonds.
a reaction happens
It becomes a negatively charged ion with a charge of 1-.
They stick!
nothing happens
ionic bond conects a nonmetal and a metal. covalent bond connects a nonmetal and another nonmetal.
when a magnet does'nt stick to another magnet it is called non-metal
A nonmetal will gain one or more electrons in order to form a negatively charged ion.
the rebels would win
A general equation showing one nonmetal replacing another nonmetal in a compound is represented by the following formula: A + BC -> AC + B. Here, element A (a nonmetal) displaces element B in compound BC to form a new compound AC.
it gets bigger!
it will form a new life or baby