pretty easily because it's an active metal
The name is "strontium sulfite" and the formula is SrSO3.
The formula unit for the ionic compound made of strontium and sulfur is SrS, called strontium sulfide.
Strontium form the divalent cation Sr2+.
No, lithium and strontium are both metals. Ionic compounds occur between metals and non-metals. They are both positively charged, so an ionic bond would not be attainable.
Strontium chloride is a compound of lithium and chlorine with the formula SrCl2. Lithium chloride is a compound of lithium and chlorine with the formula LiCl.
Strontium is in the second column of the Periodic table, therefore it naturally carries a 2+ charge... Oxygen is a Chalcogen so it naturally carries a 2- SrO
If strontium and tellurium form an ionic compound it would be SrTe.
Strontium can be a neutral atom or a cation.
Strontium Iodide - SrI2 Sr + I2 react to form SrI2
smoke dank
Strontium is an earth metal (element #38), and iodine is a halide non-metal (element #53), therefore they would form an ionic bond. Strontium ions have a +2 charge, and iodines -1, so to form a neutral-charged compound, we need 2 iodines for every Strontium, and the chemical formula would be: SrI2.
strontium sulfide
The name is "strontium sulfite" and the formula is SrSO3.
The chemical formula for the compound Strontium arsenide is SR3AS2.
Strontium Oxide
Strontium Nitride
Strontium (II) difluoride