Ammonium sulfate is (NH4)2SO4.
sulfate anion SO42- the salt of sulfuric acid. ammonium cation NH4+ which is protonated ammonia.
NH4+ and NO3- don't react, Only SO42- and Ba2+ do so by forming precipitate: SO42- + Ba2+ --> (BaSO4)s
No. Ammonium sulfate is an ionic compound with the formula unit of (NH4)2SO4. Both the ammonium ion, NH4+, and the sulfate ion, SO42- are polyatomic ions.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4 and barium chloride BaCl2 is: (NH4)2SO4 + BaCl2 → BaSO4 + 2 NH4Cl This reaction forms barium sulfate (BaSO4) and ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) as the products.
Molecular equation: H2SO4 + 2NH3 ---> (NH4)2SO4 Complete ionic equation: 2H++ SO42- + 2NH3 ---> 2NH4+ + SO42- Net ionic: 2H+ + 2NH3 ---> 2NH4+
sulfate anion SO42- the salt of sulfuric acid. ammonium cation NH4+ which is protonated ammonia.
There are many e.e. NH4+ NO3- ClO4- SO42- CO32- ETC
NH4+ and NO3- don't react, Only SO42- and Ba2+ do so by forming precipitate: SO42- + Ba2+ --> (BaSO4)s
2NH4+ + SO42- --> (NH4)2SO4
Ammonium is NH4 + and Sulfate (I think you meant sulfate anyway) is SO42-. To make a neutral ion you need two ammoniums and one sulfate. It looks like this: 2NH4SO4 or (NH4)2SO4.
No. Ammonium sulfate is an ionic compound with the formula unit of (NH4)2SO4. Both the ammonium ion, NH4+, and the sulfate ion, SO42- are polyatomic ions.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4 and barium chloride BaCl2 is: (NH4)2SO4 + BaCl2 → BaSO4 + 2 NH4Cl This reaction forms barium sulfate (BaSO4) and ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) as the products.
Molecular equation: H2SO4 + 2NH3 ---> (NH4)2SO4 Complete ionic equation: 2H++ SO42- + 2NH3 ---> 2NH4+ + SO42- Net ionic: 2H+ + 2NH3 ---> 2NH4+
Ammonium sulfate (NH4)SO4 is a chemical compound and has no electrical charge. It is however made up of ions NH4+ and SO42-
Ammonium=NH4 Sulfide=S Sulfur has a -2 charge and ammonium has a =1 charge so in order to have a neutral compound there needs to be 2 ammonium compounds ------> (NH4)2S The numbers are subscripts
A polyatomic ion is one that contains more than one atom. Many common anions are polyatomic, e.g. NO3-, SO42-, CO32-, PO43- Cations may be polyatomic, e.g NH4+, Hg22+
To determine the number of grams in 2.80 moles of (NH4)2SO3, you need to multiply the molar mass of (NH4)2SO3 by the number of moles. The molar mass of (NH4)2SO3 is 132.14 g/mol, so 2.80 moles of (NH4)2SO3 would be equal to 2.80 moles x 132.14 g/mol = 369.392 grams of (NH4)2SO3.