Xenon is a bob,e gas, which means that it can't form any cation or anion by itself. If it joins any other element, then it can form an ion.
Xenon is not typically a cation. It is a noble gas and typically exists as uncharged atoms in its elemental form. However, xenon can form cations under certain conditions, such as in xenon fluorides.
The cation would be C6H5NH3+ and the anion would be C6H5NH-
The cation of potassium cyanide is potassium (K+) and the anion is cyanide (CN-).
Xenon obeys octet rule and has a stable electronic configuration. So, xenon does not form any anion.
Can an ionic compound ever consist of a cation-cation or anion- anion bond? Explain.
Xenon is not typically a cation. It is a noble gas and typically exists as uncharged atoms in its elemental form. However, xenon can form cations under certain conditions, such as in xenon fluorides.
I don't know about radon, but xenon gas, also a noble gas, is an anion when it makes compounds, as rarely as it does.
The cation would be C6H5NH3+ and the anion would be C6H5NH-
The cation of potassium cyanide is potassium (K+) and the anion is cyanide (CN-).
Anion
anion
Xenon obeys octet rule and has a stable electronic configuration. So, xenon does not form any anion.
Can an ionic compound ever consist of a cation-cation or anion- anion bond? Explain.
Xenon obeys octet rule and has a stable electronic configuration. So, xenon does not form any anion.
Oxygen is neither a cation nor an anion. It is a neutral element.
CR is a cation.
Anion is a negative ion (Cl-) and cation is a positive ion (Na+).