The nitrate ion is NO3- and the minus sign superscripted means it has a -1 charge. The chlorite ion is ClO2- and the minus sign superscripted means it, too, has a -1 charge.
both are -1
Chlorite is ClO2- ion whereas chloride is Cl- ion
The chemical formula of potassium chlorate is KClO3.
Chloride: Cl- Chlorite: ClO2- Chlorate: ClO3-
The nitrate ion is NO3- and the minus sign superscripted means it has a -1 charge. The chlorite ion is ClO2- and the minus sign superscripted means it, too, has a -1 charge.
both are -1
MgCr2O7. The Mg ion has a +2 charge and the Cr2O7 (dichromate) ion has a charge of -2 so they form the compound in a 1:1 ratio.
The formula for the chlorite ion is ClO2-
I'm not sure what "balanced" specifically means but I'll do my best to help. Calcium (Ca) has a charge of 2- and Chlorite (ClO2) has a charge of 1- When you name chemicals you combine them with their charges: Ca2- (ClO2)1- And then you cross the charges to the other element: Ca(ClO2)2 Make sense?
KClO2, contains the chlorite anion, ClO2-
Mercury II chlorite is Hg(ClO2)2
Te chemical formula for sodium chlorite is NaClO2.
Lead IV chlorite is Pb(ClO2)4
Chlorite is ClO2- ion whereas chloride is Cl- ion
Garnet is indicative of deeper metamorphism than chlorite.
The powder is dry, the solution is wet