li cl
The salt lithium chloride is LiCl. It's an Li+ ion and a Cl- ion.
This is the chemical formula of sodium chloride.
Li atom donates one electron to a Cl atom when Li+Cl- is to be formed as ionic compound (salt):Li --> e- + Li+Cl + e- --> Cl--------------- +Li + Cl --> LiCl (or Li+Cl-)
LiCl
The ion formula for chloride is Cl-.
Li is lithium. Never heard of Ci.Do you mean Cl? That would be Lithium Chloride LiCl...
Li+ and Cl-
The formula for the chloride ion is 'Cl^-' sometimes written as 'Cl-'
Li and Cl do not form an ionic bond because Li readily loses its single valence electron to achieve a stable electron configuration (Li+), while Cl readily gains an electron to achieve a stable electron configuration (Cl-). This leads to the formation of a covalent bond between Li and Cl, where they share electrons to achieve stability.
The ion formula for chlorine is Cl-.
chlorides are ionic bonds. so lithium chloride is ionic.
An ionic bond will form between Cl and Li. Cl will gain an electron from Li to achieve a full outer shell, creating a Cl- ion, while Li will lose an electron to achieve a full outer shell, creating a Li+ ion. The attraction between the oppositely charged ions will result in the formation of an ionic bond.