salt
The resulting compound is called a salt. It is formed through the reaction between a metal atom or positive radical with an acid, where the metal or positive radical replaces the hydrogen in the acid molecule. This reaction results in the formation of an ionic compound with a positive metal or radical ion and a negative ion derived from the acid.
NH4+ is the ammonium radical, which consists of one nitrogen and four hydrogen atoms in an ionized state. It is a compound radical because it has more than one atom. An ion that consists of just one atom, such as Na+ is not a compound.
Ammonia a base, but it is not a radical; ammonium (NH4+) is a radical.
A RADICAL MAY BE A BASIC RADICAL HAVING POSITIVE CHARGE i.e., A CATION. EX: IN AMMONIUM CARBONATE AMMONIUM IS A BASIC RADICAL. ANSWERED BY VISRUTHA. THANQ. HAVE A NICE DAY.
I believe that what you have in mind is the phosphate radical, PO4. While this radical appears in many compounds, it is not itself a compound.
The resulting compound is called a salt. It is formed through the reaction between a metal atom or positive radical with an acid, where the metal or positive radical replaces the hydrogen in the acid molecule. This reaction results in the formation of an ionic compound with a positive metal or radical ion and a negative ion derived from the acid.
NH4+ is the ammonium radical, which consists of one nitrogen and four hydrogen atoms in an ionized state. It is a compound radical because it has more than one atom. An ion that consists of just one atom, such as Na+ is not a compound.
boride
Boride
boride
A zircofluoride is a double fluoride of zirconium and hydrogen, or some other positive element or radical.
An arylene is a bivalent radical produced by the removal of two hydrogen atoms from the benzene ring of an aromatic compound.
Ammonia a base, but it is not a radical; ammonium (NH4+) is a radical.
The radical with four carbon atoms and nine hydrogen atoms is the butyl radical, specifically the n-butyl radical. It is a short-lived species that is highly reactive due to having an unpaired electron. It is commonly encountered in organic chemistry reactions involving radical intermediates.
Valency is the number of hydrogen atoms that can combine with [or displace] one atom of the element [or radical] to form a compound. For example, one atom of hydrogen combines with one atom of chlorine to form hydrogen chloride [HCl]; so, the valency of chlorine [chloride] is one. Similarly, the valency of the nitrate radical [NO3] in the compound nitric acid [HNO3] is 1, and the valency of the sulfate radical in the compound sulfuric acid [H2SO4] is 2. For elements that do not combine with hydrogen, the valency is the combining power of the element with another element whose valency is known. Valency may also be defined as the number of electrons that an atom donates or accepts to form the duplet state (i.e., 2 electrons in outermost shell) or octet state (i.e., 8 electrons in outermost shell). The valency of an element [or radical] is always a whole number. Elements [or radicals] with valency one are monovalent, those with valency two are divalent, and those with valency three are trivalent
Compound; there are many types of salts and a salt by definition is a compound formed by replacing hydrogen in an acid by a metal (or a radical that acts like a metal). Table salt however is sodium chloride.
Tin ions are positive (cations).