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15 January, 14:52

Explain 1 way compounds of binary ionic and binary covalent substances are similar, as well as 2 ways in which they differ.

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  1. 15 January, 15:08
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    Similarity: they involve the presence of both a cation and an anion.

    Differences:

    1. Electron giving is done in ionic compounds and electrons sharing is done in covalent compounds.

    2. Stronger interactions in ionic compounds while weak interactions in covalent compounds.

    Explanation:

    Hello,

    In this case, one similarity present between ionic and covalent compounds is that both of them involve the presence of both a cation and an anion which are positive and negative respectively; this is in order to allow the contituents to gather by bonding either ionically or covalently.

    On the flip side, on the difference is that ionic compounds involve the giving of electrons since usually just the anion attain the octet while the covelent compounds allow electron sharing to allow both the cation and the anion to attain the octet.

    Nevertheless, despite the electron sharing and giving fact, ionic compounds have stronger interactions bonding the cation and the anion than those covalent compounds have. Ionic interactions are electrostatic and covalent interactions are attractive which are by far weaker than those electrostatic.

    Best regards.
  2. 15 January, 15:16
    0
    Answer in explanation

    Explanation:

    The similarity between binary ionic and binary covalent substances is that they both contain only 2 elements each. This means there are two elements in the configuration of both. That is the similarity between them

    Now the first difference I will like to mention is the way in which they are bonded. While ionic substances are formed through the transfer of electrons, covalent substances are formed through the sharing of electrons. This means that an element with an excess number of electrons transfer completely a number of electrons to an element that is deficient in electrons. This can be seen in the case of sodium and chlorine. The electron that is transferred is controlled only by the nucleus of the second electron. In the covalent bonding however, the electrons are shared and the electrons shared are controlled by the nuclei of both elements

    Another difference is that while binary ionic compounds might dissolve only in polar solvents such as water, binary covalent compounds might only dissolve in non polar solvents such as benzene.
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