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Silver nitrate is AgNO3 so it is not a binary compound as it contains three elemnts. The term binary ionic is unusual - chemists normally say a binary compound, binary ionic may be taken to mean just two sorts of ions in which case it would be classified as a binary ionic as ther are two ions Ag+ and NO3-
A binary compound is a compound that consists of two elements.
No, CO3N2, if such a compound exists is a covalent compound and is composed of 3 elements. A binary compound is composed of exactly two elements. However, you are you probably mean Co3N2, which is a binary ionic compound. Proper capitalization matters in chemistry.
Potassium Fluoride is an ionic compound.
You mean N2O5? That is dinitrogen pentoxide and it's also known as Nitric Anhydride. It is a solution used in chloroform.
Silver nitrate is AgNO3 so it is not a binary compound as it contains three elemnts. The term binary ionic is unusual - chemists normally say a binary compound, binary ionic may be taken to mean just two sorts of ions in which case it would be classified as a binary ionic as ther are two ions Ag+ and NO3-
A binary compound is a compound that consists of two elements.
No, CO3N2, if such a compound exists is a covalent compound and is composed of 3 elements. A binary compound is composed of exactly two elements. However, you are you probably mean Co3N2, which is a binary ionic compound. Proper capitalization matters in chemistry.
Potassium Fluoride is an ionic compound.
"Ternary" means that the compound contains three elements.
No such compound as Sodium Chlorine. If you mean sodium chloride, then it is an IONIC Crystalline compound.
You mean N2O5? That is dinitrogen pentoxide and it's also known as Nitric Anhydride. It is a solution used in chloroform.
If you mean SrCl2, then it is strontium chloride.
A Roman number in the name of an ionic compound gives the absolute value of the oxidation number of that element in the compound which immediately precedes the Roman number. This is most common with cations of elements, such as copper and cobalt, that can form stable cations in more than one oxidation state. Copper(II) chloride, for example as the formula CuCl2 while copper(I) chloride has the formula CuCl.
What is 'CaCl' ??? If you mean calcium chloride, then the formula is 'CaCl2'.
I'm not sure what you mean by "purely covalent", since the ionic-vs-covalent distinction is expressed in terms of electronegativity, which can take a range of values (higher values = more ionic). CO is very much a covalent compound though.
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