Yes, but there are also trinary (and may be quaternary) ionic salts like alum: KAl(SO4)2 potassium-aluminum sulfate
yes
Sodium phosphate is a ternary salt.
A binary compound is formed from two different chemical elements.
Binary compounds containing two nonmetals are typically covalent compounds where the atoms share electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration. These compounds tend to have lower melting and boiling points compared to ionic compounds. Examples include water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), and ammonia (NH3).
The compound PCl don't exist; all phosphorous chlorides are binary compounds.
True. Most salts are binary ionic compounds composed of a metal cation and a nonmetal anion.
True. Most salts are binary ionic compounds composed of a cation from a metallic element and an anion from a nonmetallic element.
A binary compound is a chemical compound that contains exactly two different elements. An example would be water containing hydrogen and oxygen, H2O.
Water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), table salt (NaCl), and methane (CH4) are examples of compounds that contain two elements.
Binary 1 compounds contain one type of cation and one type of anion, while binary 2 compounds contain two different cations or two different anions. Binary 1 compounds have a 1:1 ratio of cation to anion, while binary 2 compounds have a 2:2 ratio.
binary compounds
Type 1 binary ionic compounds are those in which the cation has only one form, or charge. Type 2 binary ionic compounds are those in which the cation can have multiple forms.
Binary molecular compounds are composed of two nonmetallic elements.
most ionic compounds are salt
yes
No it is not. It is a binary molecular compound. Here is your answer
Some binary covalent compounds include water (H2O), carbon dioxide (CO2), and hydrogen fluoride (HF)