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Yes, ammonium hydroxide contains nitrogen as part of its polyatomic cation, ammonium, with formula NH4+1.
The ammonium ion, NH4+, is the only polyatomic cation.
Well, a polyatomic may contain a cation in it. A cation is a positively charged ion. They are usually metals. A good way to remember is: "cats" have "paws" because they are "pawsitive". Cheesy, right? Anyways, an example of a polyatomic that contains a cation is NH4+. You know that this polyatomic has a cation by the +1 superscript. This + sign signifies a positive ion, which is called a cation!
zinc sulfate
No. An oxyanion is a polyatomic negative ion that contains oxygen. Ammonium is a cation (positive ion) and does not contain oxygen.
Phosphate (PO43-) is a polyatomic anion. The way to tell this is to look at the charge - an anion has a negative charge and a cation has a positive charge.
Hydronium is a polyatomic cation.
yes it is found in bread
I think it is Sulfate SO4 2- But I could be wrong
polyatomic anion
No single atom is the cation in ammonium chloride. The cation is polyatomic NH4+1.
Ionic compounds ammonium sulfate, has both a polyatomic cation NH4+ and polyatomic anion, SO42-