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An anion. For which element, I am not sure. Let someone else answer that.
yes it is. It is made up of 2 elements that have a charge so it is polyatomic Sources: My textbook
sodium phosphate Na3PO4
Calcium Hydroxide is Ca(OH)2 and potassium phosphate is K3PO4. So calcium hydroxide has 5 atoms and potassium phosphate has 8 atoms. So potassium phosphate has the most atoms.
CO3(2-) and PO4(3-) Carbonate and phosphate. Both polyatomic compounds that have their constituent atoms bonded covalently. The can ionicly bond to metals. For instances, MgCO3 ( magnesium carbonate )
A polyatomic ion is any ion with more than one atom. Such as: * Sulfate (SO4) * Phosphate (PO4) * Hydroxide (OH)
Phosphate (PO43-) is a polyatomic anion. The way to tell this is to look at the charge - an anion has a negative charge and a cation has a positive charge.
Phosphate is a triply charged polyatomic anion.
Of bromide, chloride, hydroxide, and phosphate, the ion commonly present in fertilizers is phosphate. typical fertilizers are given 3 numbers to identify the components (such as 10-10-10). The middle number is phosphate.
An anion. For which element, I am not sure. Let someone else answer that.
No; a polyatomic ion is like Carbonate (CO3) or Phosphate (PO4) and others.
yes it is. It is made up of 2 elements that have a charge so it is polyatomic Sources: My textbook
sodium phosphate Na3PO4
Calcium Hydroxide is Ca(OH)2 and potassium phosphate is K3PO4. So calcium hydroxide has 5 atoms and potassium phosphate has 8 atoms. So potassium phosphate has the most atoms.
CO3(2-) and PO4(3-) Carbonate and phosphate. Both polyatomic compounds that have their constituent atoms bonded covalently. The can ionicly bond to metals. For instances, MgCO3 ( magnesium carbonate )
Those are chemical formulas. NH4 is the ammonium polyatomic ion, and PO4 is the phosphate polyatomic ion. Ammonium has a +1 charge and phosphate has a -3 charge.
Potassium hydrogen phosphate. K= potassium HPO4 = the polyatomic