Iron (III) Chlorate
Fe(ClO4)3 is an ionic compound named Iron III Perchlorate.
A technically imposible compound. Iron in any compound has one of two charges: +2 and +3. Hydroxide (OH) always has a charge of -1. Thus, the compound is not balanced enough to be even remotely stable; the proper forms of iron hydroxide are Fe(OH)2 and Fe(OH)3.
calcium acetatecalcium acetate
Iron (Fe) is a chemical element.
Fe(C2H3O2)3.
The formula for iron(II) acetate is to my knowledge Fe(C2H3O2)2. And iron(III) acetate is to my knowledge Fe(C2H3O2)3.
The Fe compound is iron. The compound for OH and Fe is Fe(OH)3
is Al(C2H3O2)3 ionic or covalent
Strontium acetate is a chemical compound also called Sr(C2H3O2)2.
Assuming that the questioner meant the formula to be Al(C2H3O2)3, which the questioner probably was unable to write on a normal keyboard, the answer is aluminum acetate.
Cr+3 C2H3O2-1 <----- these are the ions and their charges Cr+3 C2H3O2-1 C2H3O2-1 C2H3O2-1 <---- the charges have to add up to zero, so three -1 acetate ions cancel out one +3 chromium ion Cr(C2H3O2)3 <----- simplify
I believe it is represented as the ion (C2H3O2)-1
iron (III) carbonate
Iron (III) Chlorate
Na+ and C2H3O2- are the two ions in the compound sodium acetate.
This compound is iron(II) nitrate.