it's all about the structure of the particles and the bonds if the chemical bond are mostly ionic they will dissolve to form freely moving ions and some structures of atoms are much stronger like metallic bonds. covalent bonds do not dissolve easily but some covalent bonds break and dissolve in water. It's all about the bond and structures of different elements.
It represents the boundary between what is considered to be an ionic or a covalent bond.
Most of them are, though there are a few that are ionic such as sodium acetate and other organic acid salts. These include ionic bonds, but also contain covalent bonds within a polyatomic ion.
By sharing electrons in covalent bonds or by transferring electrons in ionic bonds
Calcium and lithium typically form ionic bonds, where electrons are transferred from one atom to the other, resulting in the formation of ions. Ionic bonds are characterized by the electrostatic attraction between positively and negatively charged ions. This is in contrast to polar covalent bonds, where electrons are shared unequally between atoms, or non-covalent interactions like hydrogen bonding or Van der Waals forces.
Acetone is more likely to dissolve covalent compounds. It is a polar solvent and can effectively dissolve other polar covalent compounds by forming hydrogen bonds. Ionic compounds, on the other hand, tend to be soluble in water or other polar solvents that can effectively separate and solvate the ions.
The water molecule has a covalent bond. Since there is no other kind of water, "covalent water" is redundant. That's what water is. There is no ionic water (although ionic compounds often dissolve in water).
The chemistry principal of "like dissolves like," explains that polar substances will dissolve in each other. Similarly, a covalent will dissolve another covalent.
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
As a non-metal Phosphorous can form ionic compouds with metals and covalent compounds with other non-metals.
Chlorine forms covalent bonds with other nonmetals and ionic bonds with metals.
Sulfur can form both ionic and covalent bonds. In ionic bonds, sulfur tends to gain two electrons to achieve a stable octet configuration. In covalent bonds, sulfur often shares electrons with other nonmetals.
An ionic bond is where electrons are transferred from one to the other, but a covalent bond is where the electrons are 'shared'.
The polar covalent compounds are easily soluble in water as HCl, HNO3, H2SO4, Glucose and most of the sugars, Sugar has many polar covalent bonds, in the C-O-H groups, and the molecules of sugar fit easily into the hydrogen bonded microstructure of liquid water.
Neither. Hydrogen is an element, not a compound. Though it normally occurs in the form of covalently bonded molecules.
Helium does not typically form bonds with other elements. It exists as a noble gas with a stable electron configuration, so it does not form ionic or covalent bonds.
Crystals can form from both covalent and ionic compounds. Covalent crystals are held together by covalent bonds, where atoms share electrons to form a stable structure. Ionic crystals are held together by ionic bonds, where oppositely charged ions attract each other to form a lattice structure.