ionic bonds are formed between two atoms when an electron is completely transferred from one to the other.
as a result the atom which has lost the electron now has a positive charge and the atom which has gained the electron has a negative charge so the two ions (charged atoms) will attract each other. This attraction is the ionic bond.
This is the secondary school answer anyway. In reality there is no such thing as an ionic bond. The electrons are always shared between the two atoms. However some atoms attract electrons more than others (higher electronegativity) so the shared electrons in the bond are held closer to one atom than the other giving it a slightly ionic nature. How 'ionic' the bond is depends on the difference in electronegativities of the two bonded atoms
No. bonds between C and H (carbon and hydrogen) are covalent
An ionic bond would have to occur between a cation that is a metal and an anion that is a nonmetal.
Will two cations form an ionic bond?
yes
Ions of opposite charge, cations (+ve) and anions (-ve)
almost any cation and anion can together form an ionic bond (the farthest left two or three columns with the fourth to last column to the second to last column
Yes, MgCl is an ionic compound. It is an ionic compound because the bond between these two elements is an ionic bond. So, what is an ionic bond? An ionic bond is a bond between elements that form cations (positive ions) and anions (negative ions). The rule is thumb is that metals usually form ionic bond with non-metals. This happens since non-metals really want to gain electrons while metals really want to lose electrons, and so they would become anion and cation, respectively. Anions and cations are attracted to each other which create an ionic bond. Mg is a metal and Cl is nonmetal; thus, MgCl is an ionic compound.
Does two oxygen atoms for an ionic bond
Only two different atoms with opposite electrical charge can form an ionic bond.
Ions of opposite charge, cations (+ve) and anions (-ve)
Ions of opposite charge, cations (+ve) and anions (-ve)
Ions of opposite charge, cations (+ve) and anions (-ve)
No, an ionic bond is formed between a cation and an anion.
almost any cation and anion can together form an ionic bond (the farthest left two or three columns with the fourth to last column to the second to last column
Yes, MgCl is an ionic compound. It is an ionic compound because the bond between these two elements is an ionic bond. So, what is an ionic bond? An ionic bond is a bond between elements that form cations (positive ions) and anions (negative ions). The rule is thumb is that metals usually form ionic bond with non-metals. This happens since non-metals really want to gain electrons while metals really want to lose electrons, and so they would become anion and cation, respectively. Anions and cations are attracted to each other which create an ionic bond. Mg is a metal and Cl is nonmetal; thus, MgCl is an ionic compound.
Does two oxygen atoms for an ionic bond
When one or more electrons move from a metal atom over to a non-metal atom.
Only two different atoms with opposite electrical charge can form an ionic bond.
Ionic bonds are usually formed between metals and non metals. Generally speaking, elements in group 1 or 2 react with elements with group 16 or 17 to form ionic salts. Some of the common examples are sodium chloride and magnesium sulfide.
Two atoms will form an ionic bond by the complete transfer of the valence electrons if the electronegativity difference between the two atoms is above 1.7
"Adams" do not form any sort of bond except that of friendship.