The sulfate ion is SO42-. Elements in group 16 form anions with a charge of 2-, for example oxygen forms the oxide, O2- anion.
potassium
No. Sulfur is an element and Sulfate is a compound with sulfur in it.
Yes it is
Atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons; the different possible versions of each element are called isotopes. For example, the most common isotope of hydrogen has no neutrons at all; there's also a hydrogen isotope called deuterium, with one neutron, and another, tritium, with two neutrons.
yes
potassium
No. Sulfur is an element and Sulfate is a compound with sulfur in it.
They both have the element sulfur.
They both have the element sulfur.
No: Sulfur is an element with the symbol S, but sulfate is a polyatomic anion with the formula SO4-2.
Both are similar in that they both contain the element sulfur.
no! isotopes are different forms of an element with different atomic weight because they have different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei. copper sulfate is a salt formed by reacting copper with sulfuric acid.
such forms of an elements are known as isotopes.
Atoms of the same element do, but some ions do not. Iron forms 2+ and 3+ ions
Isotopes are forms of the same element that differ in Neutrons.
Allotropes-different forms of the same element ex. diamond and graphite for carbon different arrangement of the atoms Actually it is diamond, charcoal, and GRAPHITE... Not carbon
An element you have a +2 charge It is had lost electrons. It would have to lose the same number of electrons that its positive charge is. So it would have lost 2 electrons.