There are three type of charges +ve ,-ve and neutral.
the charge is 4 2+C+3(-2)=0 C=4
2+, since carbonate (CO3) has a 2- charge.
that is the main charge 3-But advanced chemistry, nitrogen has a charge of1-2-3-5+4+3+2+1+Very wierd atom
No, BeF2 does not have a 3 charge. Beryllium fluoride (BeF2) is a neutral compound with a 2+ charge on the beryllium ion and a 1- charge on each fluoride ion, resulting in a net charge of 0.
A proton has a positive electronic charge because it contains two up quarks (+2/3 charge each) and one down quark (-1/3 charge).+2/3 + +2/3 - -1/3 = +3/3 charge
There are mainly 3 types of carbides, and depending on this the charge of carbon varies : "Most common" Methanide (C4-) = -4 charge Acetylide (C2-2) = -2 charge Sesquicarbide (C3-4) = -4 charge
The charge of the ion would be +2 because there are 3 protons (positive charge) and only 1 electron (negative charge). This results in a net charge of +2.
the charge is 4 2+C+3(-2)=0 C=4
The charge of iron in FeO is 2+.Iron has also the charge 3+ in other compounds.
Proton , which have a positive charge Electron , which have a negative charge Neutron , which have a no charge , neutral
The aluminum ion in the ionic compound Al2O3 has a 3+ charge. This is because aluminum typically forms ions with a 3+ charge when it loses its outermost 3 electrons in order to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Up, Charm and Top Quarks have a charge of (2/3)e Down, Strange and Bottom Quarks have a charge of (-1/3)e Where e is the charge of the electron.
If you mean electric charge the ferric ion has a 3+ charge, the ferrous ion has a 2+ charge.
2+, since carbonate (CO3) has a 2- charge.
yes of course it does, iron has a +1, +2, +3, and a +4 charge
Aluminum oxide is a neutral compound, so it does not have a net charge. Each aluminum atom in aluminum oxide has a charge of +3, while each oxygen atom has a charge of -2, resulting in a balanced compound with no overall charge.
Fe 2+ is Ferrous Fe 3+ is Ferric