yes, i was doin this in school the other day, isn't its symbol erm PO3 and its negative charge is -3! chek mi out im such a nerd lol!!
Disodium phosphate is an ionic compound, not a covalent one. It consists of positively charged sodium ions and negatively charged phosphate ions, which are held together by electrostatic attractions.
B. False. Salt (sodium chloride) is a neutral compound formed from the combination of a positively charged sodium ion and a negatively charged chloride ion. The overall charge of salt remains neutral.
A positively charged object has an excess of protons relative to electrons. This imbalance of charge causes the object to attract negatively charged particles and repel other positively charged particles.
positively
It is true that a charged particle is called an ion. Ions that are positively charged are called cations and ions that are negatively charged are called anions.
no one cares.
Disodium phosphate is an ionic compound, not a covalent one. It consists of positively charged sodium ions and negatively charged phosphate ions, which are held together by electrostatic attractions.
Negatively charge
Cathodes are negatively charged.
An electron is negatively charged.
Electrophiles are positively charged.
I believe they'd are positively charged.
Cations are positively charged ions.
Once DNA has replicated, it condenses when negatively charged phosphate groups interact with positively charged protein molecules known as histones. This interaction helps to package the DNA into a more compact structure, known as chromatin, which plays a role in regulating gene expression.
Negatively charged
An ion is both positively and negatively charged.
Positively charged objects have an excess of protons compared to electrons, while negatively charged objects have an excess of electrons compared to protons. These imbalances in charge cause positively charged objects to attract negatively charged objects and repel other positively charged objects, and vice versa for negatively charged objects.