the same as normal zinc it's just lost 2 electrons.
The atomic number is 30 because it is determined by the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom. Since the atom is neutral, it will also have 30 electrons surrounding the nucleus to balance the positive charge of the protons.
The number of protons = atomic numberThe number of electrons = atomic number - net ion charge (no charge means not ion)The number of neutrons = mass number - atomic numberAlways start with protons if they are given. If they are not given, use the other numbers to figure out how many protons there are. The 9 protons in this question immediately tell you that the atomic number is 9. This is a dead giveaway as to which element is being discussed. Just look on the periodic table for the atomic number of 9, which is... Flourine! The number of electrons will tell you whether this is an ion or not. Ions are not stable (neutral). This means that they have a negative or positive charge. If you know how to draw a shell diagram, you can place the electrons. If all shells are filled completely and there are no extra electrons in unfilled outer shell, then it is not an ion.
Zinc is Zn; bicarbonate, also known as hydrogen carbonate, is HCO3; after taking into account the +2 charge of the Zn and the -1 charge of HCO3 we get: Zn(HCO3)2.
The oxidation number of Zn in the complex ion Zn(OH)4 2- is +2. This is because the overall charge of the complex ion is -2, and each hydroxide ion (OH-) has a -1 charge. Hence, the zinc (Zn) ion must have a +2 charge to balance the overall charge of the complex ion.
The charge of the Zn ion is typically 2+ or 2. This is because zinc typically loses two electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Zn will most likely get a 2+ (positive) charge!
Zinc has 30 protons.
The atomic number is 30 because it is determined by the number of protons in the nucleus of an atom. Since the atom is neutral, it will also have 30 electrons surrounding the nucleus to balance the positive charge of the protons.
ZnCl2 is not a element. It is an compound. however Zn contains 30 protons.
the charge of zinc has only one charge which is 2+.
Zn is not highly electro positive. So, in ZnO molecule Zn gets a small partial positive charge and O gets a small partial negative charge. Thus it can accept the lone pairs as well as donate the lone pairs and can act as Lewis acid and Lewis base simultaneously. That's why ZnO is amphoteric.
The number of protons = atomic numberThe number of electrons = atomic number - net ion charge (no charge means not ion)The number of neutrons = mass number - atomic numberAlways start with protons if they are given. If they are not given, use the other numbers to figure out how many protons there are. The 9 protons in this question immediately tell you that the atomic number is 9. This is a dead giveaway as to which element is being discussed. Just look on the periodic table for the atomic number of 9, which is... Flourine! The number of electrons will tell you whether this is an ion or not. Ions are not stable (neutral). This means that they have a negative or positive charge. If you know how to draw a shell diagram, you can place the electrons. If all shells are filled completely and there are no extra electrons in unfilled outer shell, then it is not an ion.
Zinc is Zn; bicarbonate, also known as hydrogen carbonate, is HCO3; after taking into account the +2 charge of the Zn and the -1 charge of HCO3 we get: Zn(HCO3)2.
The oxidation number of Zn in the complex ion Zn(OH)4 2- is +2. This is because the overall charge of the complex ion is -2, and each hydroxide ion (OH-) has a -1 charge. Hence, the zinc (Zn) ion must have a +2 charge to balance the overall charge of the complex ion.
The charge of the Zn ion is typically 2+ or 2. This is because zinc typically loses two electrons to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Zinc has 30 electrons, 30 protons and 34 neutrons.
To my knowledge, it is 7 x Zinc Phosphate and carries a charge of positive 2. Hope this helps :)