Cl−
The formula for the chloride ion is 'Cl^-' sometimes written as 'Cl-'
Chloride: Cl- Chlorite: ClO2- Chlorate: ClO3-
There is no chlorine chloride. The formula for a molecule of chlorine is Cl2.
No, they have different formulas and have iron in different oxidation states. Ferrous chloride or Iron II chloride has the Fe2+ ion and the formula FeCl2 Ferric chloride or Iron III chloride has the Fe3+ ion and the formula FeCl3
No. Since the chloride ion has a 1- charge such a ratio is not possible. The formula for aluminum chloride is AlCl3.
The formula for the chloride ion is 'Cl^-' sometimes written as 'Cl-'
The salt lithium chloride is LiCl. It's an Li+ ion and a Cl- ion.
2Cl-
Chloride: Cl- Chlorite: ClO2- Chlorate: ClO3-
There is no chlorine chloride. The formula for a molecule of chlorine is Cl2.
Silver chloride: AgCl
There is only one chloride ion in the formula unit of sodium chloride.
No, they have different formulas and have iron in different oxidation states. Ferrous chloride or Iron II chloride has the Fe2+ ion and the formula FeCl2 Ferric chloride or Iron III chloride has the Fe3+ ion and the formula FeCl3
Surely meant: AlCl3 for aluminum chloride
Chloride ions have a charge of 1-. Since the charge on an Mg ion is 2+, the formula unit of Magnesium Chloride is MgCl2. There are 2 chloride ions for each Mg ion.
Ammonia is a stable compound NH3. Ammonium chloride is NH4Cl (made from the ammonium ion NH4+ and the chloride ion Cl-).
Cl-1