no. Polyatomic means more than one atom, K+ is just the potassium element
No, infact Potassium is the chemical element with the symbol K.
An example of a compound composed of a metal and a polyatomic ion is magnesium sulfate (MgSO4). In this compound, magnesium is the metal, and the sulfate ion (SO4) is the polyatomic ion.
The polyatomic ion in KNO3 (potassium nitrate) is NO3- , the nitrate ion. This ion is polyatomic because it contains four atoms bonded together. The nitrate ion is derived from nitric acid, HNO3.
When KOH is placed in water, it ionizes to K+ and OH-, so the polyatomic ion is the OH- (hydroxyl anion).
Ammonim-NH4 There's also Hydronium - H3O
The polyatomic ion is the ammonium ion, NH4^+
A polyatomic ion.
The polyatomic ion SO5 does not exist. The closest polyatomic ion to this is SO4^2- which is called sulfate ion.
The polyatomic ion for nitrite is NO2-.
The polyatomic ion is a carbonate ion, with formula CO3-2.
yes it is polyatomic ion because it is made up of more than 2 atoms
KOH is an ionic compound with a polyatomic ion. The hydroxide ion (OH-) is a polyatomic ion that is composed of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom.