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NO !!!! Fluorine form an ANION , that is an ion eith negative charge. 'F^(-) '.
No. Magnesium forms an ion with a 2+ charge while fluorine forms an ion with a 1- charge, so the resulting compound is MgF2. MgF3 would require magnesium to have a 3+ charge, which would be unstable.
A fluorine atom changes into a fluoride ion by gaining one electron and developing a 1- charge.
If you think to fluorine the ion is F- (charge 1-).
Li ion has a charge of +!, lithium is in group 1, an alkali metal
NO !!!! Fluorine form an ANION , that is an ion eith negative charge. 'F^(-) '.
fluorine ion has a charge of -1, it has an extra elctron
-1.
A fluorine ion has a charge of minus one.
No. Magnesium forms an ion with a 2+ charge while fluorine forms an ion with a 1- charge, so the resulting compound is MgF2. MgF3 would require magnesium to have a 3+ charge, which would be unstable.
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Oxygen forms the O2- oxide ion; fluorine the F- fluoride ion.
If you think to fluorine the ion is F- (charge 1-).
A fluorine atom changes into a fluoride ion by gaining one electron and developing a 1- charge.
All the listed elements form ions with a charge of 1, if "1" is taken as the absolute value of the charge on the ion. For fluorine, however, the corresponding ion has a charge of -1.
Li ion has a charge of +!, lithium is in group 1, an alkali metal
Fluorine will gain one electron to form F- (or fluoride) ion. Fluoride ion has a charge of -1.