Oxygen forms the O2- oxide ion; fluorine the F- fluoride ion.
Oxygen is an element that exists as a molecule in its natural state. It originally contains no ions and later atoms are converted into ions when it is required.
As fluorine is more electronegative than oxygen, fluorine acts as the electron acceptor in the compounds with oxygen. As fluorine becomes partially negative charged and positive for oxygen, they are called fluorides.
Sodium Fluoride Sodium fluoride, but if you add oxygen, it becomes Sodium Fluorate.
Fluorine seems a likely answer
Yes, it is correct.
Oxygen is an element that exists as a molecule in its natural state. It originally contains no ions and later atoms are converted into ions when it is required.
Fluorine can not form oxyacids because fluorine is more electronegative than oxygen, and oxyacids are formed only from elements that are less electronegative than oxygen.
Helium and iodine, carbon and fluorine, and hydrogen and oxygen are three pairs of ions.
Fluorine ions, called fluoride when ionised, have a single negative charge F-.
There are two possible options here: Iron and oxygen
As fluorine is more electronegative than oxygen, fluorine acts as the electron acceptor in the compounds with oxygen. As fluorine becomes partially negative charged and positive for oxygen, they are called fluorides.
Calcium cation is Ca2+ and oxygen anion is O2-.
-ide, as in: chlorine -> chloride fluorine -> fluoride oxygen -> oxide etc.
Sodium Fluoride Sodium fluoride, but if you add oxygen, it becomes Sodium Fluorate.
Fluorine seems a likely answer
Because fluorine has greater electronegativity than oxygen.
Yes, it is correct.