there is no element with the symbol R, so perhaps it is meant to read CrCl6 which is Chromium Chloride. Hope this helps! for more info on Chromium Chloride visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chromium(III)_chloride
It has no specific charge because Chromium has no specific charge
Chromium (II) Chloride
It should be Chromium (II) Chloride :)
Chromium (ll) Chloride.
2Cr+6HCl -> 2CrCl3 + 3H2 Cr+2HCl -> CrCl2 + H2. Which reaction is correct?
CrCl2 (not CrCI2) is chromium(II) chloride.
The charge on a proton is deemed to be POSITIVE. NB The charge on an electron is deemed to be NEGATIVE ( opposite charge) The charge on a neutron is deemed to be ZERO(NO CHARGE).
A cation has a positive charge and an anion has a negative charge.
the charge of a proton is called positive charge neutron- negative charge electron- no charge
Pb + CrCl2 = PbCl2 + Cr considered a redox single replacement and the Cr has a +2 charge so we assume the Pb also has a +2 because it is a transition metal
CrCl2
2Cr+6HCl -> 2CrCl3 + 3H2 Cr+2HCl -> CrCl2 + H2. Which reaction is correct?
An example is the chromium chloride: CrCl2.
maybe, I am not entirely certain about this predicament I have found oursleves in. I hope you're drinking some nice choccy milk
CrCl2 (not CrCI2) is chromium(II) chloride.
Electrons have negative charge and protons have a positive charge, neutrons have no charge.
what ranking charge pari passu?
Negative charge = electron Positive charge = positron Positive charge = proton
An atom may have a positive charge, a negative charge, or no charge. If it has a non-zero charge, it is said to be an ion.
The kinds of electric charge are positive charge and negative charge
no, it has a negative charge