Yes, constituted of 4 atoms: 1 Nitrogen and 3 oxygen atoms: NO3-
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.
You need to specify what kind of name before anyone can answer this? ALuminum is aluminum and Nitrate is a polyatomic ion.
The ammonium ion, NH4+, and the nitrate ion, NO3-.
I think you mean the nitrate ion. Yes, that is a polyatomic ion with a negative charge. You write it as : NO3-
Atoms can covalently bond together to produce a polyatomic ion, which can form a salt with another ion of opposite charge. Carbonate, phosphate, sulfate, nitrate, acetate, and other alkanoate salts all illustrate this phenomenon.
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.
Nitrate
(no_3)^(-1)
NO3-.
NO3 is a covalently bonded polyatomic ion.
polyatomic ions
You need to specify what kind of name before anyone can answer this? ALuminum is aluminum and Nitrate is a polyatomic ion.
You must mean....NO3(-) this is the polyatomic ion nitrate
The ammonium ion, NH4+, and the nitrate ion, NO3-.
Li(N03) is the formula of lithium nitrate, Li+ ion and NO3- ion are combined in this salt (compound)
The anion with the formula NO3-1 is a covalently bonded polyatomic ion.
Nitrate