Chemistry, asked by Sahilrihan859, 1 day ago

Whats the difference between an ionic bond and a covalent bond?

Answers

Answered by anusuyadey1990
0

Answer:

Covalent bonds are formed in Methane and Ionic bonds are formed in sodium chloride.

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Complete step by step answer:

Ionic bonds Covalent bonds

A polar bond is formed by the attraction between oppositely-charged ions. Usually, an electron is more attracted to one atom than to another, forming a polar covalent bond.

Answered by sandeepghosh49135
0

Answer:

Ionic bonds Covalent bonds

In ionic bonds, one atom donates an electron to stabilize the other atom. In a covalent bond, the atoms are bound by the sharing of electrons.

Atoms that participate in an ionic bond have different electronegativity values from each other. In a true covalent bond, If the electron is shared equally between the atoms forming a covalent bond, then the bond is said to be nonpolar.

A polar bond is formed by the attraction between oppositely-charged ions. Usually, an electron is more attracted to one atom than to another, forming a polar covalent bond.

Here is the example - sodium and chloride form an ionic bond, to make NaCl. We can predict an ionic bond will form when two atoms have different electronegativity values. Here is an example, the atoms in H2O, are held together by polar covalent bonds. Covalent compounds may dissolve in water, but don't dissociate into ions.

Explanation:

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