Greetings, all.
So, my book refers to
Ammonium nitrate as an Ionic Compound. It also says that ionic bonds are defined as being between metals and nonmetals. I understand that both ammonium and nitrate are polyatomic ions and
why they're connected (+ and -); however, the part that trips me up is that neither of them are metals.
NH
4- and NO
3-Are ionic compounds not exclusive to metal + nonmetal relationships, then? Is this some sort of single exception to the rule (which I notice a lot of in chemistry!
). Wait! Also, while I'm here. Is hydrogen a metal or nonmetal? It's listed in group I as a metal, but it also has covalent relationships in other compounds. My book says covalent bonds are only between nonmetals (electron sharing). Does this mean that no metallic element can form covalent relationships with other elements (which brings me back to hydrogen!)?
Regards,
methic