NH4+, or ammonium, has a tetrahedral shape with a covalent bond angle of 109.5 degrees between the hydrogen atoms. The bond length of the nitrogen-hydrogen bond is about 1.04 Angstroms.
NH4 has a tetrahedral molecular shape. Four hydrogen atoms surround a central nitrogen atom with no lone pairs on the nitrogen. The entire molecule has a +1 charge.
NH4^+ (ammonium ion) has a tetrahedral molecular shape.
Trigonal Pyramidal.
Its tetrahedral...I think :)
Yes, the ammonium ion NH4 is a Bronsted-Lowry base.
NH4+ is NH3's conjugate acid. NH3 accepts H+ to become a Bronsted-Lowry base.
Proton spin lattice relaxation by NH4+ ion motions and spin diffusion in some ammonium compounds
NH4+1
NH4+ is detected by nessler's reagent.
The term molecular ion is confusing, the answer may be yes or no depending on your definition. No,Ammonium (NH4+) is not a molecular ion because it is formed by co-ordinate covalent bonding between N & H while molecular ions are those which are formed in mass spectrometer beams Yes, because many people would say molecular ion is another name for polyatomic ion. NH4+ is polyatomic.
The OsbCl3 ion has a tetrahedral molecular shape
The oxidation number of the ammonium ion is +I.
No. Ammonium sulfate is an ionic compound with the formula unit of (NH4)2SO4. Both the ammonium ion, NH4+, and the sulfate ion, SO42- are polyatomic ions.
Yes, ammonium is a polyatomic ion, which is a group of atoms acting as a single atom.
Nh4 is a molecular compound
the ammoniun ion has a tetrahedral molecular shape. It has four groups of electrons surrounding the nitrogen atom. The fact that the ion has an overall charge does not affect the shape.
The polyatomic ion is the ammonium ion, NH4^+
trigonal planar
The ammonium ion is (NH4)+.
It is a tetrahedral structured ion, the central nitrogen atom is sp3 hybridized.
"NH4" I assume is NH4+This is the ammonium ion.