Calcium would form Ca2+ and chlorine would form Cl-.
The ionic compound would be CaCl2 to ensure a neutral charge for the whole compound.
Calcium chlorate is an ionic compound.
Ca (calcium) is an element, not a compound. and it can only form ionic compounds.
It's Calcium Permanganate. Ca = Calcium Ionic compound MnO42 = Permanganate There should be parentheses around the ionic compound (after the 4) - Ca(MnO4)2
What is the ionic compound name of Ca(CIO4)2
No compound has this formula. However, Ca(ClO4)2 is (with a lowercase L) is calcium perchlorate.
No, it is an ionic bond. Calcium(Ca) has a +2 charge and Chlorine(Cl) has a -1 charge. So one Ca and two Cl give a net charge of zero. Any bond that deals with a charge, like this one, is going Tobe an ionic bond.
Yes, any combination of a metal and a nonmetal could potentially form am ionic compound. However, some reactions may have to be forced by raising temperature, changing pressure, or stressing equilibrium. In this particular case, though, they would react to make CaCl2 or calcium chloride.
Ca(ClO3)2
The bond between calcium and sulfur would be ionic. The corresponding compound would be calcium sulfide.
We know that the alkaline earth metal calcium (Ca) and the halogen bromine (Br) form the ionic compound calcium bromide (CaBr2). Here's the reaction: Ca + 2Br => CaBr2
CaF2
Ca(ClO3)2.