NO!!!
Phosphates it is '+5'
Phosphides it is '-3'
The element which has the same oxidation number in all of its known compounds is fluorine. Fluorine always has an oxidation number of -1 in its compounds because it is the most electronegative element.
Elements in the same group have similar chemical properties because they have the same number of valence electrons. This leads to similar reactivity and tendency to form compounds with the same oxidation number. The oxidation number is related to the number of electrons an atom gains, loses, or shares to reach a stable electron configuration.
In KO2, O has an oxidation number of -1, K has an oxidation number of +1. In CO2, O has an oxidation number of -2, C has an oxidation number of +4. In K2CO3, O has an oxidation number of -2, C has an oxidation number of +4, and K has an oxidation number of +1. In the given reaction, the oxidation numbers for each atom remain the same as in their individual compounds.
In ionic compounds, the oxidation number is determined by the charge associated with each ion. For cations, the oxidation number is the same as the charge on the ion. For anions, the oxidation number is the negative of the charge on the ion. The sum of the oxidation numbers in an ionic compound must be zero.
Of course not. No change in neutrons. Number of electrons decrease
Phosphorus increases its oxidation number in this reaction. In H3PO4, phosphorus has an oxidation number of +5, and in K3PO4, it has an oxidation number of +5 as well. This means that phosphorus's oxidation state remains the same throughout the reaction.
I think it is the same "Magnesium phosphide"
The element which has the same oxidation number in all of its known compounds is fluorine. Fluorine always has an oxidation number of -1 in its compounds because it is the most electronegative element.
Elements in the same group have similar chemical properties because they have the same number of valence electrons. This leads to similar reactivity and tendency to form compounds with the same oxidation number. The oxidation number is related to the number of electrons an atom gains, loses, or shares to reach a stable electron configuration.
In KO2, O has an oxidation number of -1, K has an oxidation number of +1. In CO2, O has an oxidation number of -2, C has an oxidation number of +4. In K2CO3, O has an oxidation number of -2, C has an oxidation number of +4, and K has an oxidation number of +1. In the given reaction, the oxidation numbers for each atom remain the same as in their individual compounds.
Phosphate is a chemical group with the formula R3PO4 where R represents a generally reduced chemical group such as a methyl group or a Hydrogen atom for covalent Phosphate compounds and PO4(-3) for the Phosphate anion with 4 Oxygen atoms covalently bonded to a central Phosphorus atom with 3 negatively charged electrons shared between the four Oxygen atoms. Phosphide is an anion where Phosphorus has three electrons bound to it. It is an extremely strong base in contrast to Phosphate which is a significantly weaker base. Phosphide is also a very strong reducing agent.
In ionic compounds, the oxidation number is determined by the charge associated with each ion. For cations, the oxidation number is the same as the charge on the ion. For anions, the oxidation number is the negative of the charge on the ion. The sum of the oxidation numbers in an ionic compound must be zero.
The oxidation number of fluorine in the fluorine molecule (F2) is 0. In a molecule composed of the same element (like F2), each atom has an oxidation number of 0.
Of course not. No change in neutrons. Number of electrons decrease
No, valence and oxidation number are not the same. Valence refers to the combining capacity of an atom based on its outer shell electrons, while oxidation number indicates the apparent charge of an atom in a compound or ion.
The oxidation number of F, or Fluorine, is F-1. Since it is in the seventh group on the periodic table, it has seven valence electrons. It needs to get eight valence electrons to be stable, so it will gain one electron.
Though it is very reactive, the oxidation number of ozone (O3) is zero: it is the tri-atomic form of elemental oxygen. The same applies to the di-atomic O2 molecule.