ClO- isHypochlorite.
ClO2- is Chlorite.
ClO3- is Chlorate.
ClO4- is Perchlorate.
It's good to memorize all four of those if you are having a chemistry test on polyatomic ions.
(Edited, remember the one with more oxygen is always prefixed with "-per")
The compound KClO is potassium chlorate. It is a chemical compound that is made up of one potassium ion (K⁺) and one chlorate ion (ClO₃⁻).
Ca(ClO)2 is the chemical formula of calcium hypochlorite.
Ah, the oxidation state of Cl in ClO is -1. You see, in compounds with oxygen, like ClO, oxygen usually has an oxidation state of -2. Since the overall charge of ClO is 0, chlorine must have an oxidation state of +1 to balance out the -2 from oxygen.
Tetranitrogen tetraselenide is the name of the compound.
Mg(ClO)2 is the formula for magnesium hypochlorite.
The compound KClO is potassium chlorate. It is a chemical compound that is made up of one potassium ion (K⁺) and one chlorate ion (ClO₃⁻).
Calcium hypo-chlorite. It is used to sanitize public swimming pools and disinfect drinking water.
The correct name for ClO- ion is hypochlorite ion.
The systematic name of NH₄ClO₃ is ammonium chlorate. In this compound, NH₄⁺ represents the ammonium ion, while ClO₃⁻ is the chlorate ion. The name reflects the combination of these two ions, indicating the presence of ammonium and the chlorate functional group.
clo clo-bo Coco clo-clo coco pops cloball cleo crackin-clo TIP: If you want to, you could use their initials for instanse: if their first name was Sadie, their middle name was Alice and their last name was Serton, then they could be called sas.
Ca(ClO)2 is the chemical formula of calcium hypochlorite.
Clo-eeze, with the clo as in clone and not clown
If you mean ClO-, this is not a systematic name. There are quite a few ions made of chlorine and oxygen, and the general name for them is chlorates, (where the -ate ending signifies oxygen). If there is a lower amount of oxygen than in another compound we often change the ending to -ite, and the prefix hypo means 'below' , so basically we are saying this is an anion containing chlorine and oxygen, but not very much oxygen. Systematically, we call it the chlorate(I) ion.
'Hypochlorite' anion (from bleach) also called 'active chlorine': OCl- + Cl- + H2O --> 'Cl2' + 2 OH- (slow)
The formula name for NH₄ClO₄ is Ammonium perchlorate.
HCIO does not exist. HClO with a lowercase, L, however is a molecular compound.
The formula: Zn(ClO)2 is for Zinc Hypochlorite.