it is a negative ion because silver doesnt attracts positive ions which makes it more metallic it is a negative ion because silver doesnt attracts positive ions which makes it more metallic
Nitrate has a single, negative charge - NO3-
Nitrate is a negative ion (anion), NO3-. It does not exist in isolation, but must be part of a compound with a positive ion (cation). Examples of nitrate salts are sodium nitrate, NaNO3-, magnesium nitrate, Mg(NO3)2 and ammonium nitrate, NH4NO3. These salts are solid at room temperature and water soluble. (When nitric acid, HNO3, dissolves in water the solution also contains the nitrate ion as well as hydrogen ions)
Negative ion. Cl-
AgNO3 is essentially a positive Ag ion and negative NO3 polyatomic ion. it is a test for halide ions like I minus. So Ag+(charge) + I-(charge) -->AgI in which case a white precipitate should form, confirming the presence of iodide.
Silver Nitrate-- AgNO3 has no charge since Ag (silver ion) has a +1 charge and NO3 (nitrate, a polyatomic ion) has a -1 charge [1+(-1) = 0]. Most chemical compounds are usually balanced.
Silver for in solution a cation (positive ion, Ag+).A strange compound is AgF3 where silver is trivalent.
Due to presence of chloride ion
By adding silver nitrate to the compound. If a White precipitate is formed, then it means chloride ion is present.
Na is positive ion,Cl is negative ion
Nitrate has a single, negative charge - NO3-
Neither. No substance on its own on is an ion. Nitric acid is electrically neutral. When dissolved in water, nitric acid breaks apart, releasing both positive hydronium ions and negative nitrate ions.
Potassium nitrate is ionic because the "nitrate" is an ion. Nitrate produces a NO3- ion (negitive ion) and the Potassium produces the K+ (positive ion). Thus the ionic designation.Enjoy
Silver Nitrate is soluble.
when an atom loose electron it become negative ion and when it gains electron it become positive ion
Can't say, since "o" is not an element. However: Ag3N is Silver Nitride AgNO2 - Silver Nitrite AgNO3 - Silver Nitrate
Nitrate is a negative ion (anion), NO3-. It does not exist in isolation, but must be part of a compound with a positive ion (cation). Examples of nitrate salts are sodium nitrate, NaNO3-, magnesium nitrate, Mg(NO3)2 and ammonium nitrate, NH4NO3. These salts are solid at room temperature and water soluble. (When nitric acid, HNO3, dissolves in water the solution also contains the nitrate ion as well as hydrogen ions)
yes it does ,because it positive ions of hydrogen and negative ion of nitrate (H0^+ and NO3-)