the answer to that question is a turtle is always the wisest animal
there are three separate single ionic bonds
Only two different atoms with opposite electrical charge can form an ionic bond.
- covalent bonds involve electrons sharing- covalent bond is not so strong as ionic bond
Mostly between metals and nonmetals. You donate an ion to another atom.
hard crystilline solid high melting point soluble
These are melting point, boiling point, hardness.
An ionic bond exists when one element donates its electrons to the other element in the bond. It is not a true bond but rather an electrostatic attraction (the + of one is attracted to the - of the other) Ionic bonds occur if there is a great difference in electronegativity (greater than 1.7 in the pauling scale). Usually they will occur with a alkaline metal (1A element - very low electronegativity) and a halogen (7A - very electronegative.) Some properties are that they disassociate in water (depressing the freezing point raising the boiling point and making the liquid conductive). They form crystal complexes and do not truly exist as a molecule rather as an ionic solid with no definable beginning or end. They therefore do not have a molecular formula but rather just an empirical formula representing their ratio.
Covalent bond and ionic.
Yes. An ionic bond is an electrical charge between two atoms, thus giving off energy.
there are three separate single ionic bonds
Only two different atoms with opposite electrical charge can form an ionic bond.
Ionic bond covalant bond hydrogyn bond
- covalent bonds involve electrons sharing- covalent bond is not so strong as ionic bond
It has both . Na3PO4 separates into 3Na^(+) & PO4^(3-_/ The sodium to phosphate bond is IONIC. However, the oxygen to phosphorus bond in the phosphate anion is COVALENT.
Mostly between metals and nonmetals. You donate an ion to another atom.
hard crystilline solid high melting point soluble
covalent hydrogen and ionic