Aluminium nitrite is a neutral compound.
A nitrate ion and nitrite ion have the same charge of -1. The difference between the two ions is that nitrates formula is NO3 while nitrites formula is NO2.
No, h2 does not have a net charge. It is a neutral molecule.
It's not an ionic compound.
No. The oxidation number is the charge on the atom of an element, or if the bonding is covalent, what that charge would be if that bonding were ionic. A "molecule" with an electrical charge would be a polyatomic ion, not a molecule.
Nitrite (NO2) has a negative one (-1) charge (the same as a nitrate ion)
Aluminium nitrite is a neutral compound.
Nitrite is a polyatomic ion with an overall charge of -1. The formula for nitrite is NO2-.
-1
Try nitrite, (NO2)-
The molecule of oxygen is diatomic.
both are -1
A nitrate ion and nitrite ion have the same charge of -1. The difference between the two ions is that nitrates formula is NO3 while nitrites formula is NO2.
Nope
The nitride ion is N3-, three nitrogen atoms bound by three extra electrons to form one molecule of nitrogen.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NitrideThe nitrite ion is NO2-. One nitrogen atom with two oxygen atoms that share an electron to form a molecule of nitrogen dioxide.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NitriteThe nitrate ion is NO32-. The nitrate ion carries a formal charge of negative two, where each oxygen carries a −2/3 charge while the nitrogen carries a +1 charge.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrate
A molecule hasn't an electrical charge. An ion has a positive charge (cation) or a negative charge (anion).
No, h2 does not have a net charge. It is a neutral molecule.