Li is the atomic symbol on the Periodic Table for Lithium, and C2H3O2 is the configuration for acetate. Together, this reads "Lithium acetate"
Use equimolar quantities: LiOH + HC2H3O2 (acetic acid) --> C2H3O2- (acetate) + Li+ + H2O
AgC2H3O2 dissociates into Ag+ and C2H3O2- ions. Ag+ is the silver ion with a +1 charge, and C2H3O2- is the acetate ion.
C2H3O2- is the acetate ion.
This is the ion acetate.
The formula for boron acetate is B(C2H3O2)3.
The formula for erbium acetate is Er(C2H3O2)3.
CaCl2(aq) + Pb(C2H3O2)2(aq) --> Ca(C2H3O2)2(aq) + PbCl2(s) This is a double replacement/displacement reaction.
Zn(C2H3O2)2 is an ionic compound. Ionic compounds typically consist of a metal cation (Zn in this case) and a non-metal anion (C2H3O2- in this case).
Al(C2H3O2)3 is ionic. It consists of a metal cation (Al3+) and acetate anions (C2H3O2-), which typically form ionic compounds due to the transfer of electrons between the metal and non-metal elements.
KCH3CO2=potasium acetate.
Cr+3 C2H3O2-1 <----- these are the ions and their charges Cr+3 C2H3O2-1 C2H3O2-1 C2H3O2-1 <---- the charges have to add up to zero, so three -1 acetate ions cancel out one +3 chromium ion Cr(C2H3O2)3 <----- simplify
Na2CO3+2H(C2H3O2) >2Na(C2H3O2) + CO2+H20