Tin(IV) acetate has the chemical formula (not symbol) Sn(C2H3O2)4.
According to the periodic table, Sn is the symbol for tin.
The Answer To Your Question Is.... tin (IV) oxide
Tin(III) Phosphate
Yes it contains the lead (IV) ion.
Sn4+
how many proton and electron are in the tin IV ion
The formula for the tin four ion is Sn+4
Tin(IV) = Sn4+Chloride = Cl-Formula = SnCl4
A Stannic ion is the ion of Tin(IV). Its formula is Sn4+ . Here tin is in its highest oxidation state of +4. The other ion is Stannous(Sn2+).
Sn4+ is the symbol for Tin(IV), that is, the element tin with a oxidation state of 4.
Pb4+
Tin(IV) acetate has the chemical formula (not symbol) Sn(C2H3O2)4.
Sn(CrO4)2 Tin 4 means that the tin is a cation with a +4 charge. Chromate is a polyatomic ion with the formula (CrO4)-2. Since the tin ion has a +4 charge in this case, and the chromate ion has a -2 charge, there is a 1:2 ratio of tin ions to chromate ions.
It is Tin(II) oxide or Stannous oxide
According to the periodic table, Sn is the symbol for tin.
*Tin Sulfate* NO! This is WRONG!SnS2 is Tin(IV) Sulfide, not Tin SulfateThe (IV) means that Tin has a 4+ charge (can be Tin(II) with a 2+ charge or Tin(IV))Sulfur has a 2- charge, so it takes 2 Sulfur ions to balance out the chargesso you have 1 Tin Ion with a charge of 4+ and 2 Sulfur Ions with charges of 2+put them together and it makes SnS2Sulfate is a polyatomic ion with the formula SO4 with a 2- charge, so the formula for Tin Sulfate would be Sn(SO4)2