+5. In oxyacids, oxygen has an oxidation state of -2 and hydrogen an oxidation state of +1. Therefore, the single chlorine atom must have an oxidation state of +5 for the total oxidation states to add to zero.
+5. In oxyacids, oxygen has an oxidation state of -2 and hydrogen an oxidation state of +1
This is formed by Hclo4, Chlorine shows the 7oxidation number.
Aluminium is trivalent, chlorine is monovalent.
H is 1+ and each O is 2-. This results in a total for the H and O of 5+. In order for HClO3 to be neutral the Cl must be 5+(plus five).
-1 for Cl
+3 for Al
Cl has an oxidation state (number) of -1
The oxidation number of aluminium is 3+.
SnCl3? The anion SnCl3- exists and in it Sn has an oxidation number of +2
The oxidation state of chlorine in the ClO- ion is 1+
Cl2 + 2Cu --> 2CuCl Oxidation reaction is Cu --> Cu+ + 1e Reduction reaction is Cl + 1e --> Cl- Redox reaction is Cu + Cl --> Cu+ + Cl-
Oxygen in compounds is almost always in the -2 formal charge, and the charges of all atoms must add to the overall charge. 3 x -2 + (Cl) = -1, thus (Cl) = +5.
Na is +1 because it is a metal, and its charge is its oxidation number O is -2 it is more electronegative than Cl, so it takes the electrons (6-8=-2) Cl is +3 need to make the whole thing neutral (-2*2=-4 -4+1=-3... Cl has to balance it out.)
+5. In oxyacids, oxygen has an oxidation state of -2 and hydrogen an oxidation state of +1. Therefore, the single chlorine atom must have an oxidation state of +5 for the total oxidation states to add to zero.+5. In oxyacids, oxygen has an oxidation state of -2 and hydrogen an oxidation state of +1
Fe = +3 oxidation state Cl = -1 oxidation state
oxidation state of Fe in FeCl3 is +3. Cl has oxidation number -1 in this case Fe share 3 electrons with Cl so its oxidation state is +3.
K = +1 oxidation state Cl = +3 oxidation state O = -2 oxidation state
S = +2 oxidation state cl = -1 oxidation state
+5
the most common oxidation state of chlorine is -1.
SnCl3? The anion SnCl3- exists and in it Sn has an oxidation number of +2
The oxidation state of chlorine in the ClO- ion is 1+
-1 for Cl -2 for each O +5 for P
This is a perfect example of why we have to be so careful about which letters are upper case and which are lower. No stands for nobelium, but as you have also written cl, which should be Cl, I suspect you don't mean nobelium chloride, but NOCl, nitrosyl chloride. If it were NoCl, then the N alone would be meaningless, and the nobelium would have an oxidation state of +1. In NOCl, the nitrogen has an oxidation state of +3.
I didn't know there was an element called Ci?? I presume u meant Cl (CL) Chlorine It is 0 if it exist as a free element. (Which means that it is 0 if is not chemically combined to anything) But if it is in a compound, it is usually -1 (minus one) e.g HCl (The oxidation state of Cl in HCl is -1 (negative one) But in ZnCl2 (The oxidation state of Cl is still -1 BUT there is two chlorine atoms inside the compound, so it is -1 x(times/multiply) 2 = which is -2. The oxidation state in ZnCl2 is -2)