Chloride.
What is the 3rd most abundant ion in sea water?
Chloride is actually the most abundant ion in ocean water.
Chloride
No, chloride is the most abundant negative ion in extracellular fluid, not calcium. Calcium is an important cation in the body and plays a role in various physiological processes, but it is not the most abundant negative ion in extracellular fluid.
No, chloride is actually a negatively charged ion in blood plasma. The most abundant positive ion in blood plasma is sodium.
Carbonate (CO3-2)
bicarbonate
False. The most abundant negative ion in extracellular fluid is chloride, not calcium. Calcium is usually found as a positively charged ion in extracellular fluid.
Sodium ion is the most concentrated ion in the extracellular fluid.
No, it is the most common dissolved ion in the ocean. The most common element by mass is oxygen as the ocean is still mostly water.
Choride accounts for the highest percentage of ocean salts.
The most common ion of cadmium is the cadmium ion (Cd²⁺), which is prevalent in various chemical compounds and solutions. Cadmium primarily exists in two stable isotopes: Cd-106 and Cd-114, with Cd-114 being the most abundant isotope, accounting for about 28.7% of naturally occurring cadmium.