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The first is the metal, the second is the nonmetal with the suffix -ide; ex.: sodium chloride.
octet rule
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Salts made of a metal and a nonmetal are named this way: [metal] [nonmetal root]-ide Examples: sodium + chlorine = sodium chloride potassium + iodine = potassium iodide Salts made from a metal or other complex cation and a nonmetal or other complex anion are named based on the cation and anion names: ------------------------------- ammonium ion + hydroxide ion = ammonium hydroxide sodium ion + hypochlorite ion = sodium hypochlorite calcium ion + chloride ion = calcium chloride
Fluoride is an ion formed by the nonmetal fluorine.
The first is the metal, the second is the nonmetal with the suffix -ide; ex.: sodium chloride.
Fluoride is the ion of fluorine, which is a nonmetal.
Bromide is the ion of the element bromine, which is a nonmetal.
Yes. Salt contains a metal ion and a nonmetal ion bonded together by an ionic bond.
A nonmetal will gain one or more electrons in order to form a negatively charged ion.
It is an Ion
An ion
Phosphorus is a nonmetal, because it does not form any monatomic positive ion.
Sulfate is a negative ion composed of the nonmetals sulfur and oxygen bus is itself not a metal or a nonmetal. The sulfate ion does not exist as a substance on its own. Its charge must be balanced by a positive ion the identity of that ion is variable.
octet rule
Iodine is a nonmetal and it forms the iodide ion, I-.
No, bromide is an ion formed by the nonmetal bromine.