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False, all compounds are electrically neutral.
No, it is not true that a neutral ionic compound can only contain ions with identical charges. You can have, for example, a compound that consists of twice as many positive ions as negative ions, but the positive ions have only half the charge; +1 ions bonded to -2 ions. There are many different possible ratios with which different elements or radicals combine. As long as the total amount of charge adds up to zero, you still have a neutral ionic compound.
If that were true, there would be no soluble ionic compounds. Since there are soluble ionic compounds, the answer must be no.
It is true of binary ionic compounds but not necessarily of compounds containing polyatomic ions.
False
true
I think its 4+
False, all compounds are electrically neutral.
true
No, it is not true that a neutral ionic compound can only contain ions with identical charges. You can have, for example, a compound that consists of twice as many positive ions as negative ions, but the positive ions have only half the charge; +1 ions bonded to -2 ions. There are many different possible ratios with which different elements or radicals combine. As long as the total amount of charge adds up to zero, you still have a neutral ionic compound.
It is an ionic compound.
it is an ionic compound
If that were true, there would be no soluble ionic compounds. Since there are soluble ionic compounds, the answer must be no.
this is an Ionic compound since Ba is a true metal from group II and F is a non metal
It is true of binary ionic compounds but not necessarily of compounds containing polyatomic ions.
Sodium chloride is an inorganic salt, an ionic salt, a water soluble salt.
yes.