No ,because chlorine atom gets an electron to become a negative ion , it possess 7 electron in valence shell which need only one more elcetron to complete it .
Chlorine will not for Cl-7 ion. It will form Cl-1 ion, which has total of 18 electrons.
No. Chlorine forms a negative ion, Cl-
Helium does not form ion.
None of them. Cl is the symbol for an atom of chlorine. If it were a compound there would be at least one other symbol, and the same applies to a polar molecule. If it were a negative ion it would be Cl- with the negative sign as a superscript. Chlorine doesn't form positive ions in normal circumstances, but it would be Cl+ , again with the charge as a superscript.
Na is positive ion,Cl is negative ion
Chlorine will not for Cl-7 ion. It will form Cl-1 ion, which has total of 18 electrons.
Negative ion. Cl-
Cl-.
The sulfate ion SO42- reacts with Barium Chloride to form the insoluble BaSO4. It will not even dissolve in nitric acid.
Any positive ion will be able to bond with the Cl- ion to form an ionic bond. There is no more likely or less likely to bond. If the positive ion is 2+ charged, it simply bonds with 2 Cl- ions. If it is 1+ charged, it simply bonds with 1 Cl- ion. Hence, there is no positive ion which is most likely going to bond with Cl-.
The formula for the chloride ion is 'Cl^-' sometimes written as 'Cl-'
CoCl2 forms two types of ion: Co2+ and Cl-
Cl- Cl-
The Sulfide ion, S2-, is isoelectronic with Cl-
No. Chlorine forms a negative ion, Cl-
The chloride becomes Cl-1 . When an ion is negative, it becomes an anion (or A Negative ION).
Helium does not form ion.