An ionic compound, specifically silver iodide.
probably silver Iodide. Ag is silver and I is Iodine
No, AgI is a binary ionic compound. Silver (Ag) is a metal, and iodine (I) is a nonmetal. Metals and nonmetals form ionic bonds.
First, Ag is an element and not a compound at this form. Its name is silver
Ag is the chemical symbol for silver, which is an element. It is not a compound.
The formula for the ionic compound formed between silver (Ag) and the phosphate ion (P3-) would be Ag3PO4. This is because the charges of the ions must balance to form a neutral compound.
The oxidation number of Ag in AgCl is +1. AgCl is an ionic compound where Cl has an oxidation number of -1, so for the compound to be neutral, the oxidation number of Ag must be +1.
A compound: any formula that contains more than one kind of atomic symbols represents a compound.
The compound with the formula Ag⁺ is silver ions, which have a charge of +1. Silver ions are formed when silver loses one electron.
The ionic compound for silver chloride is AgCl. Silver (Ag) has a +1 charge and chloride (Cl) has a -1 charge, so they combine in a 1:1 ratio to form AgCl.
The formula of a compound that contains Ag, N and O is Ag(NO3). The name of the compound is silver nitrate.
Silver, whose symbol is Ag, is an element.
The ionic equation between halides and silver nitrate involves the cation from silver nitrate combining with the anion from the halide compound to form a precipitate. For example, with chloride ions, Ag^+ from silver nitrate reacts with Cl^- from the chloride compound to form solid silver chloride (AgCl) precipitate. The net ionic equation would show the formation of the silver halide precipitate.