The ionization of cesium carbonate: Cs2(CO3) -> 2Cs+ + CO32-. Two Cesium ions with, each with a charge of +1, and one carbonate ion, with a charge of 2-.
Cesium Carbonate = Cs2CO3
Cs2CO3
Carbonate ions have a negative charge, and they therefore repel other carbonate ions (like charges repel, as described by Coulomb's Law). You can only have a group of carbonate ions in a material if that material also contains positively charged ions which will attract the negatively charged carbonate ions. Calcium carbonate is an example of such a material.
Carbon carbonate is not a possible compound, because carbonate ions (CO32-) only combine with postive metal ions and C does not exibit this property, being a NONmetal
Except chloride, all others are polyatomic ions.
Cesium Carbonate = Cs2CO3
Cesium hydrogen carbonate is CsHCO3
9.03x10 23 ions
yes
Iron carbonate (FeCO3) contai the cation Fe2+ and the anion (CO3)2-.
Cs2CO3
Cs2CO3
This statement is not true.
1) Add a little hydrochloric to acid to a sample of the solid or solution you wish to test for carbonate ions 2) If effervescence is seen & the gas produced turns limewater milky white, the gas produced was carbon dioxide - this indicates that carbonate ions were present
caco3 (40)+(12)+3(16) =100/40 =2.5
Cs1+
+2