nitrate ion is: NO3- , so it has a -1 charge
== Since Nickel(III) has a +3 charge and Nitrate (NO3) has a -1 charge, the chemical formula for nickel(III) nitrate would therefore be Ni(NO3)3
Silver Nitrate-- AgNO3 has no charge since Ag (silver ion) has a +1 charge and NO3 (nitrate, a polyatomic ion) has a -1 charge [1+(-1) = 0]. Most chemical compounds are usually balanced.
Mg(NO3)2 is called magnesium nitrate. You do not use the prefix di for the nitrate since this is an ionic compound, and it can only be (NO3)2 as nitrate has a -1 charge and Mg has a +2 charge.
It's chemical formula is Ag(NO3)2 because Silver originally had a charge of 2+ while Nitrate only had a charge of 1- to obtain a neutral charge you can multiply the 1- from nitrate by 2. So then you get 2+ and 2- which results in 0.
No. A nitrate anion has a 1- charge.
The chemical name is nitrate and the chemical formula is (NO3)-.
Nitrate has a single, negative charge - NO3-
The chemical formula of a nitrate is MeNO3 (Me is the metal).
The chemical formula for ferric nitrate/ iron nitrate is Fe(NO3)3.
NO3- stands for nitrate anion. It has to have one negative charge ( .- ) in superscript position.
-1 charge