2-. Sulfur is in group 16, it has 6 valence electrons and requires 2 more electrons to achieve the stable octet,
Sulfide is divalent ion. it is S2-
No,it does not have ionic bonds.It has covalent bonds.
Yes. Sodium (Na+) has a 1+ charge while the sulfate (SO42-) has a 2- charge. That makes the molecule ionic. But because the sulfate ion (SO42-) is composed of 2 non-metals, S and O, that makes it a covalent bond. Therefore, it contains both ionic and covalent bonding.
There is ionic and covalent bonds: Ionic - SO4 is a polyatomic ion with a charge of 2-, so the molecule can be represented as H22+ SO42- Covalent - There are also covalent bonds between the S-O atoms
It is true that compounds formed from ions will form in such a way that the charges balance out and the compound has not net charge. An example might be aluminum with a plus 3 charge (Al^3+) combining with a chloride ion with a minus 1 charge (Cl^1-) to make aluminum chloride, where there will be 1 Al^3= and 3 Cl^1- to make AlCl3 (no net charge).
Sulfide is divalent ion. it is S2-
No,it does not have ionic bonds.It has covalent bonds.
Yes. Sodium (Na+) has a 1+ charge while the sulfate (SO42-) has a 2- charge. That makes the molecule ionic. But because the sulfate ion (SO42-) is composed of 2 non-metals, S and O, that makes it a covalent bond. Therefore, it contains both ionic and covalent bonding.
There is ionic and covalent bonds: Ionic - SO4 is a polyatomic ion with a charge of 2-, so the molecule can be represented as H22+ SO42- Covalent - There are also covalent bonds between the S-O atoms
It is true that compounds formed from ions will form in such a way that the charges balance out and the compound has not net charge. An example might be aluminum with a plus 3 charge (Al^3+) combining with a chloride ion with a minus 1 charge (Cl^1-) to make aluminum chloride, where there will be 1 Al^3= and 3 Cl^1- to make AlCl3 (no net charge).
When ions come together, they do so in a way that balances out the charges on the ions.
Let's say that an Oxygen (O) has a charge of -2. O-2 is no longer called an atom because it has a charge. It is now called an ion. It is said as Oxygen negative 2 ion. It means that the atom's number of electrons increased by 2.
I think the answer is HS-1. This is written out in plain English (non-scientific terms) is HS Negative One. It may also be written as HS-
Gained or lost electron(s).
BaS or Barium sulfide is the ionic compound. Ba has a charge of 2+ and S has a charge of 2- so when you combine them, they produce the neutral ionic compound BaS.
The ion S(2-) has 16 protons and 18 electrons.
molecular equation: CuSO4 (aq)+Fe (s) --> Cu(s) + FeSO4(aq) net ionic equation: Cu2+(aq) + Fe2+ (s) --> Cu2+(s) + Fe2+(aq) spectator ion: Sulfate Ion (SO42-)