salt
A metal oxide reacting with a nonmetal oxide typically results in the formation of a salt. This reaction can be classified as a synthesis or combination reaction, where the metal cation from the metal oxide combines with the nonmetal anion from the nonmetal oxide to form a salt.
The reaction is likely a double displacement reaction, where the metal ions from the metal oxide and the nonmetal ions from the nonmetal oxide switch partners to form new compounds. The ternary salt may also participate in exchanging ions with the other compounds.
Reaction between a metal oxide and a nonmetal oxide to produce a salt containing at least three elements is a synthesis reaction. The salt almost always contains at least one monatomic metal cation and at least one polyatomic anion that contains all of the elements of the reacted nonmetal oxide plus the oxygen atoms from the metal oxide. This type of anion is called an "oxyanion" or the "anion of an oxyacid."
It depends what the metal is, but any metal combined with oxygen will be an oxide, for example: Copper + Oxygen = Copper Oxide.
They might react to form a salt. Example: Fe2O3 + CO2 --> Fe2(CO3)3 Iron-III oxide + Carbon dioxide [react to] Iron-III carbonate Added: Ternary Salt (? = cf. discussion section)
A metal oxide reacting with a nonmetal oxide typically results in the formation of a salt. This reaction can be classified as a synthesis or combination reaction, where the metal cation from the metal oxide combines with the nonmetal anion from the nonmetal oxide to form a salt.
When a metal oxide reacts with a nonmetal oxide, they form a salt. The reaction typically involves the transfer of electrons from the metal to the nonmetal, resulting in the creation of a new compound. The resulting product will depend on the specific metal and nonmetal oxides involved in the reaction.
The reaction is likely a double displacement reaction, where the metal ions from the metal oxide and the nonmetal ions from the nonmetal oxide switch partners to form new compounds. The ternary salt may also participate in exchanging ions with the other compounds.
Reaction between a metal oxide and a nonmetal oxide to produce a salt containing at least three elements is a synthesis reaction. The salt almost always contains at least one monatomic metal cation and at least one polyatomic anion that contains all of the elements of the reacted nonmetal oxide plus the oxygen atoms from the metal oxide. This type of anion is called an "oxyanion" or the "anion of an oxyacid."
It is a hydration reaction.
Reaction between a metal oxide and a nonmetal oxide to produce a salt containing at least three elements is a synthesis reaction. The salt almost always contains at least one monatomic metal cation and at least one polyatomic anion that contains all of the elements of the reacted nonmetal oxide plus the oxygen atoms from the metal oxide. This type of anion is called an "oxyanion" or the "anion of an oxyacid."
Ionic compounds are compound consisting of a metal plus a nonmetal. The metal and the nonmetal both have charges that you can find on the Periodic Table, and they have to balance each other out. For example, you have MgO (Magnesium Oxide). The magnesium is the metal, the oxygen is the nonmetal, and they both have a charge of +2 and -2, so the subscripts cancel each other out.
It depends what the metal is, but any metal combined with oxygen will be an oxide, for example: Copper + Oxygen = Copper Oxide.
They might react to form a salt. Example: Fe2O3 + CO2 --> Fe2(CO3)3 Iron-III oxide + Carbon dioxide [react to] Iron-III carbonate Added: Ternary Salt (? = cf. discussion section)
Metal oxide + Water --> Metal hydroxide
Metal and nonmetal combination typically forms an ionic bond, where one atom donates electrons to the other, resulting in the formation of positively and negatively charged ions that are attracted to each other.
Zinc is a metal and Oxygen is a non-metal.