Cations are ions which are positively-charged while anions are negatively-charged.
Examples of Cations: Na+, Mg2+, Al3+, NH4+ , etc.
Examples of Anions: S2-, N3-, Cl-, SO42-, etc.
Cations are the species that have net positive charge on them while anions are the species that have negative charge over them. For eg:- anions: SO42- , CO32-, S2- cations: Al3+, Sr2+ , Ca2+
it is not pie
cation
Potassium, K+, is a cation
Cesium is an element that forms a cation.
CATION: Na+ ANION: F-
It's 1+ Yeah
The cation of lithium is Li+.
A Cation is a positive ion formed after removal of electron(s). For example, Fe^+2
its positive
The ammonium ion, NH4+, is the only polyatomic cation.
Yes. Example of atomic cation is Na+. Example of atomic anion is Cl-. Example of molecular cation is NH4+. Example of molecular anion is NO3-.
For example the sodium cation, Na+.
For example the cation Bh7+.
No the fluoride ion is an anion
For example the sodium cation: Na+.
Mg^2+, Na^+. Any positively charged ion.
The only cation (positively charged ion) is ammonium NH4+ the others are all anions (negatively charged ions)
An example is calcium(11)oxide. Ca^2+ cation interact with O^2- anion