F is fluorine, and it is neither a cation or an anion. F^- is formed when F gains an electron. F^- is an ANION.
Yes, F- is the fluoride anion
F (fluorine) will form an anion.
The cation,Na +and the anion,F -form the ionicly bonded compound,sodium fluoride.
polyatomic anion
The cation,Na +and the anion,F -form the ionic compound,NaF============sodium fluoride.
An anion is an ion with a negative charge - so SO42- is an anion
F (fluorine) will form an anion.
The anion fluoride is (F)-.
The anion fluoride is (F)-.
Flouride
Anions are types of ions that are frequently characterized by their negative charges. One example of an anion would be F-.
CATION: Na+ ANION: F-
Fluoride is a monovalent anion ===> F-
Fluoride(not flouride) is the reduced form of fluorine (F2): it is the F- anion.
The cation,Na +and the anion,F -form the ionicly bonded compound,sodium fluoride.
The fluorine. 2F - SrF2 ======the compound
polyatomic anion
The cation,Na +and the anion,F -form the ionic compound,NaF============sodium fluoride.