CCl4 is carbon tetrachloride. It is covalently bonded.
No. CCl4 is a polar covalent compound and not ionic.
The main reason that CCl4 is not hydrolysed and SiCl4 is hydolysed is because SiCl4 is an ionic compound and CCl4 is a covalent compound.
Carbon is found in group 4 on the periodic table above the heavy "stair step" line that divides metals and nonmetals, so it is a nonmetal. Chlorine is in group 7 and is also a nonmetal. So, the bonds in CCl4 (tetrachloromethane) are covalent.
CCl4 contains only covalent bonds.
Covalent because they are both non-metals.
No. CCl4 is a polar covalent compound and not ionic.
The main reason that CCl4 is not hydrolysed and SiCl4 is hydolysed is because SiCl4 is an ionic compound and CCl4 is a covalent compound.
Carbon is found in group 4 on the periodic table above the heavy "stair step" line that divides metals and nonmetals, so it is a nonmetal. Chlorine is in group 7 and is also a nonmetal. So, the bonds in CCl4 (tetrachloromethane) are covalent.
CCl4 contains only covalent bonds.
Covalent because they are both non-metals.
The bonds in CCl4 are polar covalent.
Based off my chemistry class, for bonds to be ionic it must be a bonding of a metal and a non-metal. Since chlorine and carbon are both non metals they can't be ionic, we would call it covalent bond but molecular compound works as well.
CCl4 is a covalent bond. Their difference in electronegativity isn't that great
Carbon tetrachloride is CCl4. It is covalent.
Carbon tetrachloride
carbon tetrachloride
C-Cl4 , the - (dash) indicates a single bond between 1 carbon atom and 4 chlorine atoms.