(1 point) Ionic because the . Al is a Type I monatomic ion, no Roman Numeral is needed since the charge does not change. Some of the more common chemicals use the -ous/-ic nomenclature, but the use of Roman Numerals to designate the charge is acceptable. Citric Acid Ionic or Covalent. [CDATA[*/{"annotations":null,"assetRoot":null,"branding":null,"clientUrl":"https://cdn.hypothes.is/hypothesis/1.38.0/build/boot.js","oauthEnabled":null,"onLayoutChange":null,"openLoginForm":null,"openSidebar":null,"query":null,"services":null,"showHighlights":"always","sidebarAppUrl":"https://hypothes.is/app.html","subFrameIdentifier":"05527016113303902","pluginClasses":{}}/*]]>*/, /**/. When an element donates an electron from its outer shell, as in the sodium atom example above, a positive ion is formed. Citric acid ionic or covalent. To figure out that charge "x", we need take a look at what we know. [CDATA[*/{"annotations":null,"assetRoot":null,"branding":null,"clientUrl":"https://cdn.hypothes.is/hypothesis/1.38.0/build/boot.js","oauthEnabled":null,"onLayoutChange":null,"openLoginForm":null,"openSidebar":null,"query":null,"services":null,"showHighlights":"always","sidebarAppUrl":"https://hypothes.is/app.html","subFrameIdentifier":"08377344125202544","pluginClasses":{}}/*]]>*/, /**/, /*