The charge of ion selenide is 2-.
A selenide contain the anion Se(2-).
titanium (II) selenide = SeTi
The systematic name of this ionic compound is Tin(IV) Selenide.
K2Se is potassium selenide or more precisely dipotassium selenide. As for KSe that probably doesn't exist, if it did it would be monopotassium selenide
No, h2 does not have a net charge. It is a neutral molecule.
When selenium gains two electrons, it becomes the selenide ion.
Copper (I) Selenide by the stock system or Cupprous Selenide by the latin system.
lead (IV) selenide
The net charge is the total amount of charge that the ion will have. So you will find out the charge of each group and add them all together for the net charge.
The net charge of DNA is negative.
No an electron does not have a net charge of 0, in fact it has a net charge of -1.
The ionic compound formed between beryllium and selenium is beryllium selenide. Beryllium (Be) has a +2 charge, while selenium (Se) typically has a -2 charge. To balance the charges, one beryllium ion combines with one selenide ion, resulting in the formula BeSe.
A selenide contain the anion Se(2-).
titanium (II) selenide = SeTi
Thallium(III) Selenide
The systematic name of this ionic compound is Tin(IV) Selenide.
K2Se is potassium selenide or more precisely dipotassium selenide. As for KSe that probably doesn't exist, if it did it would be monopotassium selenide