0,
1 hydrogen ion of positive charge
and 1 carbonate ion of negative 1 charge
HC2H3O2 or CH3COOH has an anion name of acetate and an acid name of acetic acid.
The compound has a charge of -1.
This is the hydrogen carbonate or "bicarbonate" ion HCO3-
I assume you mean CuCO3. The anion is CO32-, carbonate
Cation in H2CO3
Carbonate (CO32-)
It is CO3 (--)
The anion is (SO4)2-.
The anion is (HCO3)-.
Cadmium is Cd2+ bicarbonate is a polyatomic anion HCO3- Cd(HCO3)2
Ni(HCO3)2
The chemical symbol for bicarbonate is HCO3-. This is because it has one carbon atom surrounded by three atoms and a hydrogen atom attached to one of them. The negative charge comes from one formal charge.
Na is sodium which has a charge of +1. This is your cation HCO3 is Hydrogen Carbonate which has a charge or -1. This is your anion. Thus your final answer would be Sodium Bicarbonate
I think it depends mostly on which formula you are using. The more commonly used formula for anion gap is [Na+] − ([Cl−] + [HCO3−]). If you are using the other equation that includes Potassium ([Na+] + [K+]) − ([Cl−] + [HCO3−]) remember that Potassium is significantly increased with hemolysis due to it being mainly intracellular. This would result in a false increase of the anion gap due to hemolysis. I don't think using the former equation would result in that significant of a change since the other electrolytes are not affected much by hemolysis.
HCO3- is a anion (bicarbonate); HCO3+ don't exist.
anions are negative ions. •SO42- •HCO3- •CO32- •Cl-
Cadmium is Cd2+ bicarbonate is a polyatomic anion HCO3- Cd(HCO3)2
Ni(HCO3)2
The anion (HCO3) has the electrical charge -1.
The bicarbonate ion (hydrogen carbonate) is an anion with the empirical formula HCO3− and a molecular mass of 61.01
You think probable to the anion bicarbonate - (HCO3)-.
The bicarbonate ion, HCO3-.
HCO3- anion has 1H, 1C and 3O atoms thus 5 atoms in total.
The chemical symbol for bicarbonate is HCO3-. This is because it has one carbon atom surrounded by three atoms and a hydrogen atom attached to one of them. The negative charge comes from one formal charge.
It doesn't contain (a) H atom(s), it is ionic, 'made' of carbon dioxide and calcium oxide which are not organic.Some of the inorganic carbon species are:carbon dioxide, CO2carbonic acid, H2CO3bicarbonate anion, HCO3-carbonate anion, CO32-
Na is sodium which has a charge of +1. This is your cation HCO3 is Hydrogen Carbonate which has a charge or -1. This is your anion. Thus your final answer would be Sodium Bicarbonate