Asked by carter
which are covalent and which are ionic?
• carbon tetrachloride, CCl4(l)
• hydrogen fluoride, HF(g)
• potassium iodide, KI(s)
• magnesium oxide, MgO(s) .
I got that they are all ionic but that doesn't seem right
• carbon tetrachloride, CCl4(l)
• hydrogen fluoride, HF(g)
• potassium iodide, KI(s)
• magnesium oxide, MgO(s) .
I got that they are all ionic but that doesn't seem right
Answers
Answered by
DrBob222
A is covalent. You could have googled "Is CCl4 ionic or covalent" and found your answer.
B is polar covelent; i.e., slightly ionic, but mostly covalent but actually is a dipole which makes it polar.
C and D are ionic compounds. You could have googled all of these OR read on Google about covalent vs ionic bonds. Im surprised your text/notes didn't tell you. Generally those sources are quite good.
B is polar covelent; i.e., slightly ionic, but mostly covalent but actually is a dipole which makes it polar.
C and D are ionic compounds. You could have googled all of these OR read on Google about covalent vs ionic bonds. Im surprised your text/notes didn't tell you. Generally those sources are quite good.
Answered by
DrBob222
Here is a good discussion about ionic vs covalent compounds and how to distinguish how they are formed.
https://sciencenotes.org/ionic-vs-covalent-bonds/
https://sciencenotes.org/ionic-vs-covalent-bonds/
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