C2H3O2 represents the chemical formula for the acetate ion, which is a negatively charged polyatomic ion composed of 2 carbon atoms, 3 hydrogen atoms, and 2 oxygen atoms. It is commonly found in salts such as sodium acetate.
AgC2H3O2 dissociates into Ag+ and C2H3O2- ions. Ag+ is the silver ion with a +1 charge, and C2H3O2- is the acetate ion.
This is the ion acetate.
The formula for boron acetate is B(C2H3O2)3.
The formula for erbium acetate is Er(C2H3O2)3.
Zn(C2H3O2)2 is an ionic compound. Ionic compounds typically consist of a metal cation (Zn in this case) and a non-metal anion (C2H3O2- in this case).
AgC2H3O2 dissociates into Ag+ and C2H3O2- ions. Ag+ is the silver ion with a +1 charge, and C2H3O2- is the acetate ion.
C2H3O2- is the acetate ion.
This is the ion acetate.
The formula for boron acetate is B(C2H3O2)3.
The formula for erbium acetate is Er(C2H3O2)3.
CaCl2(aq) + Pb(C2H3O2)2(aq) --> Ca(C2H3O2)2(aq) + PbCl2(s) This is a double replacement/displacement reaction.
Zn(C2H3O2)2 is an ionic compound. Ionic compounds typically consist of a metal cation (Zn in this case) and a non-metal anion (C2H3O2- in this case).
Al(C2H3O2)3 is ionic. It consists of a metal cation (Al3+) and acetate anions (C2H3O2-), which typically form ionic compounds due to the transfer of electrons between the metal and non-metal elements.
KCH3CO2=potasium acetate.
Cr+3 C2H3O2-1 <----- these are the ions and their charges Cr+3 C2H3O2-1 C2H3O2-1 C2H3O2-1 <---- the charges have to add up to zero, so three -1 acetate ions cancel out one +3 chromium ion Cr(C2H3O2)3 <----- simplify
Na2CO3+2H(C2H3O2) >2Na(C2H3O2) + CO2+H20
Li is the atomic symbol on the periodic table for Lithium, and C2H3O2 is the configuration for acetate. Together, this reads "Lithium acetate"