Yes, an isotope can also be an ion. An isotope is a variant of an element with the same number of protons but a different number of neutrons, while an ion is an atom or molecule with a net electric charge due to the loss or gain of electrons.
This atom of Nitrogen with 7 protons, 7 neutrons, and 8 electrons is an isotope, specifically nitrogen-14. It is not an ion because it has an equal number of protons and electrons, so its charge is neutral. It is also not an average atom, as it has a specific number of protons and neutrons that define it as a particular isotope.
The hydrogen ion is H+. It loses its electron and becomes a free proton. (That is for the simplest isotope; there are also heavier isotopes that have either one or two neutrons added to the nucleus.)
It is hydrogen element. It is tritium isotope of hydrogen.
Br is a chemical element symbol for bromine. It exists as neutral atoms in its most common form. An isotope would refer to different forms of bromine with varying numbers of neutrons, while an ion would indicate a charged species of bromine due to gaining or losing electrons.
A chloride ion (of the isotope 35Cl) with a charge of -1. The 17 protons tell you its chlorine and since there is one more electron than proton it has a charge.
A chromium ion is not neutral. By definition an ion is not neutral. All atoms belong to an isotope, but that has nothing to do with whether the atom is ionized or not.
Neutral atom. An atom of nitrogen will also be an isotope of nitrogen.
it is batman
It can be both.
ion
An alumimium atom is electrically neutral and it is an isotope of aluminum.
they all have the same element with the same number
You call it an ion of that isotope. Let's use carbon-14 for example. If a carbon-14 atom gains/loses an electron, you simply call it a "carbon-14 ion".
This atom of Nitrogen with 7 protons, 7 neutrons, and 8 electrons is an isotope, specifically nitrogen-14. It is not an ion because it has an equal number of protons and electrons, so its charge is neutral. It is also not an average atom, as it has a specific number of protons and neutrons that define it as a particular isotope.
Helium is a neutral atom that has several isotopes and can become an ion.
In one atom of cobalt ion, the number of neutrons can vary based on the isotope. The most common isotope of cobalt is cobalt-59, which has 33 neutrons.
37, as the isotope is identified by its mass number.