No No, sugar is not an ion. In fact, it doesnt even dissociate in water. It is a compound.
A polyatomic ion.
just a basic chem student but ill take a crack at this one NaCl aka salt. when salt is in water the bonds between the 2 elements break then the Na+ ion and Cl-ion float away into the H2O the reason they dissolve less in the same amount of water is because there intermolecular force of the opposing charge will make them reform when the percent concentration leans higher to the salt sugar on the other hand is not ionic in any way you can dissolve huge amounts of sugar in very little water when heated i believe you can dissolve 512g(about a pound) of sugar in 100mL of water at 90C
which element can only formed one ion
No, sugar is not a solution. Sugar water is a solution of sugar and water, but sugar itself is not.
A single charged atom is called a simple ion I think as opposed to a group of ions or radicals.
Glucose (C6H12O6) is a molecular compound. It can't be an ion, since ions are bonds between metals and nonmetals. Carbon is not a metal, neither hydrogen nor oxygen.
Sugar is extracted from sugarbeet, sugarcane etc.Pure water is obtained by distillation, demineralization with ion exchangers, reverse osmosis etc. or combined procedures.
When you mix silver nitrate with sugar, a chemical reaction takes place that results in a black precipitate of silver metal forming. This reaction is a reducing sugar reaction, where the sugar acts as a reducing agent to convert the silver ion in silver nitrate into silver metal.
the sugar particles turn into ions which attach to the polar molecules of water Each sugar molecule does not become an ion. Each sugar molecule is charge neutral and thus has no charge. When sugar is dissolved in water, the water pulls the sugar molecules apart from each other and the individual sugar molecules no longer touch each other. Each sugar molecule is surrounded by water. The forces between molecules are responsible for this. The polar shape of water molecules is what governs the separation.
No, table sugar (sucrose) is not an Arrhenius acid. Arrhenius acids are substances that ionize in water to produce hydrogen ions (H+). Table sugar does not ionize in water and therefore does not act as an acid in this sense.
Discretion, Excretion, Accretion, Secretion, Bet ion, Get ion, Jet ion, Let ion, Met ion, Net ion, Pet ion, Set ion, Skeet ion, Vet ion, Wet ion.
Ions are electrically charged atoms. Water is a solute. Ions are put in water to dissociate to make salt water, sugar water or kool aid.
The ion charge of an NH4 ion is 1.
Nitride Ion.
A cation is a positively charged ion. Barium ion is Ba^2+, chloride ion is Cl^-, nitrate ion is NO3^-, and chromate ion is CrO4^2-.
Sugar and salt are both soluble in water but behave differently because of their molecular structure. Sugar molecules are polar and form hydrogen bonds with water molecules, while salt molecules dissociate into ions that attract water molecules through ion-dipole interactions. This difference in molecular interactions leads to different dissolution behaviors for sugar and salt in water.
The correct name for the cesium ion is "cesium ion" or "Cs+ ion".