Since astatine is a group 7 element I guess it is -1.
The ionic formula for calcium astatide is CaAt2, because calcium typically forms 2+ cations and astatine typically forms 1- anions, requiring two astatine ions to balance the charge of one calcium ion.
The ion charge of an NH4 ion is 1.
The bromide ion has a 1- charge.
The charge of the molybdenum ion is +2.
An ion does have a charge. That is what makes it an ion.
(NH4)3At; im so clever it took me 2 seconds
I believe the chemical formula for cesium astatide is "CsAt".
The ionic formula for calcium astatide is CaAt2, because calcium typically forms 2+ cations and astatine typically forms 1- anions, requiring two astatine ions to balance the charge of one calcium ion.
Cesium astatide (CsAt) is soluble because astatide ions (At-) are larger in size and have significant polarizability, leading to easily breakable ion-ion interactions. Additionally, the strong polarizability of astatide ions allows for them to form favorable interactions with solvent molecules, enhancing solubility.
The ion charge of an NH4 ion is 1.
This is the electrical charge of the ion.
The bromide ion has a 1- charge.
A fluorine ion has a charge of minus one.
An astatide is a binary compound of astatine and another element.
The charge of the molybdenum ion is +2.
No. The acetate ion has a -1 charge.
An ion does have a charge. That is what makes it an ion.