NH4 is the chemical formula of the cation ammonium - (NH4)+.
Nh4 is a molecular compound
NH4NO3Ammonium nitrate.=============
(NH4)3P would be ammonium phosphide.
NH4+ is not a compound It is an ion and is a part of any one ionic compound and which can not be a binary compound.
The compound (NH4)2S is ammonium sulfide.
Nh4 is a molecular compound
ammonium carbonate
NH4NO3Ammonium nitrate.=============
(NH4)3P would be ammonium phosphide.
The compound is ammonium oxide. You can tell because the NH4+ and O2- ions are present.
NH4+ is not a compound It is an ion and is a part of any one ionic compound and which can not be a binary compound.
The name of the compound (NH4)3PO4 is triammonium phosphate.
The compound (NH4)2S is ammonium sulfide.
The name of the compound (NH4)3PO4 is triammonium phosphate.
(NH4)2SeO4, it is an ionic compound composed of 2 (NH4)+ ions and one (SeO4)2- ion.
Yes. An ionic compound is between a cation and an anion. NH4+ (ammonium) serves as the cation and Cl- (Chloride ion) serves as the anion.You can also think about it this way. NH4 bonds covalently but the nitrogen still has one remaining electron that is not being bonded, this will TRANSFER to the Chlorine; making it an ionic bond.(Ionic bonds show a transfer of electrons whereas covalent bonds are when electrons are being shared.)While it does have covalent bonds in it, yes, it is an ionic compound.
It is a covalent compound so you could call it "nitrogen trihydride" or, as most people know it, "ammonia".