Nitrate
Nitrate (NO3^-), because the Hydroxide ion also has a negative one charge (OH^-)
It would be unethical to use this service to answer exam or graded questions. CaCl2 + 2NaOH --> 2NaCl + Ca(OH)2 Calcium Chloride + Sodium Hydroxide --> Sodium Chloride + Calcium Hydroxide Why: Ca ion has 2+ charge Cl ion has 1- charge Na ion has 1+ charge OH polyatomic ion has 1- charge
The hydroxide ion has a 1- charge.
NaOH is Sodium Hydroxide.
Polyatomic ion
Nitrate (NO3^-), because the Hydroxide ion also has a negative one charge (OH^-)
Hydroxide it is a polyatomic ion and has a -1 charge :)
Hydroxide is not a molecule but a polyatomic ion with a -1 charge. it has the formula OH- it is very basic.
Sodium Hydroxide. the OH in NaOH is a polyatomic ion and has a negative charge.
hydroxide is a polyatomic ion (OH[superscript -])
Yes, it is correct. Calcium has a +2 charge, and the hydroxide polyatomic ion has a -1 charge.
It would be unethical to use this service to answer exam or graded questions. CaCl2 + 2NaOH --> 2NaCl + Ca(OH)2 Calcium Chloride + Sodium Hydroxide --> Sodium Chloride + Calcium Hydroxide Why: Ca ion has 2+ charge Cl ion has 1- charge Na ion has 1+ charge OH polyatomic ion has 1- charge
The hydroxide ion has a 1- charge.
I think we get H2O
NaOH is Sodium Hydroxide.
The polyatomic ion we often see in a base is the hydroxide ion, which has OH- as its chemical formula. Some examples of bases are lithium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide and calcium hydroxide. They are written LiOH, NaOH, KOH and Ca(OH)2, respectively.
No, oxide is just an oxygen ion. The formula is just O(-2 charge), hence not a polyatomic ion. Hydoxide on the other hand is a polyatomic ion, formula being OH(-1 charge)