2+
Cadmium Bromide
Cadmium is a divalent metal with the cation Cd+.
As a metal, cadmium forms a positive ion (a cation) when it ionizes, usually with a charge of +2. However, pure elemental cadmium has no charge because it has enough electrons to balance its protons, and cadmium salts are electrically neutral because the charge of the anion balances the charge of the anion.
Cadmium has a divalent cation: Cd2+.
Hydroge is a cation (H+) and bromide is an anion (Br)-.
Positive 2
Cadmium Bromide
Cadmium is a divalent metal with the cation Cd+.
As a metal, cadmium forms a positive ion (a cation) when it ionizes, usually with a charge of +2. However, pure elemental cadmium has no charge because it has enough electrons to balance its protons, and cadmium salts are electrically neutral because the charge of the anion balances the charge of the anion.
Two bromide ions can combine with one barium cation to form an ionic compound, because a barium cation has an electrical charge of +2, while a bromide anion has an electrical charge of -1.
Cadmium has a divalent cation: Cd2+.
Hydroge is a cation (H+) and bromide is an anion (Br)-.
Aluminium cation is 3+; bromide anion is Br-. The aluminium bromide is AlBr3.
Lithium bromide (LiBr) is a compound, not a cation. The cation is Li+.
No, it is is not. A cation is always formed by losing an electron while bromide is an anion formed by gaining an electron. By rahul
i dont know x 6
Potassium bromide, KBr: K+ - cation, Br- - anion