No. Copper(I) chloride and copper(II) chloride are both ionic solids.
The spectator ions in the reaction between copper (II) chloride (CuCl2) and aqueous ammonium phosphate ((NH4)3PO4) are Cl- and NH4+. These ions do not participate in the chemical reaction and remain unchanged in the solution.
The proper formula unit for the combination of copper(II) ions and chloride ions is CuCl2. In this compound, each copper ion carries a 2+ charge (Cu^2+) and each chloride ion carries a 1- charge (Cl^-). The subscript 2 in the formula indicates that two chloride ions are needed to balance the charge of one copper(II) ion.
The complete ionic equation for the reaction between copper(II) sulfate and barium chloride is: Cu^2+(aq) + SO4^2-(aq) + 2Ba^2+(aq) + 2Cl^-(aq) → BaSO4(s) + CuCl2(aq)
NH4Cl is ammonium chloride.
Chloride is the chemical name for Chloride
No copper (II) chloride is an ionic compound.
Copper(II) chloride is already a compound; its formula is CuCl2
The chemical formula (not equation) of copper(II) chloride is CuCl2.
CuOH2
Formula: CuI2
The spectator ions in the reaction between copper (II) chloride (CuCl2) and aqueous ammonium phosphate ((NH4)3PO4) are Cl- and NH4+. These ions do not participate in the chemical reaction and remain unchanged in the solution.
PbCu2
The Transition metals can have variable charges depending on what they are bonded to. In this example the Copper atom is deficient by two electrons one for each Chlorine atom.
The proper formula unit for the combination of copper(II) ions and chloride ions is CuCl2. In this compound, each copper ion carries a 2+ charge (Cu^2+) and each chloride ion carries a 1- charge (Cl^-). The subscript 2 in the formula indicates that two chloride ions are needed to balance the charge of one copper(II) ion.
They are identical - bonding two elements to form a binary compound. The only difference is that copper can be found as copperII or copperIV so it's correct to specify which one, that's all. Save with Pb (lead) and other unique metals/nonmetals.
Formula: Cu(OH)2
Formula: Cu(ClO3)2