No, CO3 (carbon trioxide) is a negatively charged polyatomic ion with a charge of -2.
The equation for the ionization of CO3- with water is: CO3- + H2O → HCO3- + OH-
Carbon trioxide is an unstable oxide of carbon, and is in the form of gas. so no co3 is not an acid
+2 because CO3 has a charge of -2 and both they should equal to 0
The formula for ruthenium(IV) carbonate is Ru(CO3)2.
In a 0.25 M solution of aluminum carbonate, Al2(CO3)3, the compound dissociates into its ions: 2 aluminum ions (Al³⁺) and 3 carbonate ions (CO3²⁻) for each formula unit. Thus, from one mole of Al2(CO3)3, you get 2 moles of Al³⁺ and 3 moles of CO3²⁻. Therefore, in a 0.25 M solution, the concentration of Al³⁺ ions is 0.50 M (2 x 0.25 M) and the concentration of CO3²⁻ ions is 0.75 M (3 x 0.25 M).
A Co3+ ion has lost three electrons from its neutral state, so it has 23 electrons.
The equation for the ionization of CO3- with water is: CO3- + H2O → HCO3- + OH-
Lead carbonate is a neutral compound it contains Pb+2 and CO3-2 ions.
The pKa for HCO3- ----> CO3-2 + H+ is 10.33 I assume you would have a reaction such as K+ HCO3- + H2O ------> K+CO3-2 + H3O+ In which the potassium acts as a neutral ion.
A carbonate ion (CO3^2-) has a charge of -2. Since sodium ions (Na+) have a charge of +1, two sodium ions are needed to make a carbonate ion electrically neutral.
Carbon trioxide is an unstable oxide of carbon, and is in the form of gas. so no co3 is not an acid
The oxidation number for CO3 with a charge of -2 is 2.
carbonate ion
CO3 - The elements present in this are one carbon atom and three oxygen atoms, CO3 is a base, the name of it is carbonate, K2CO3 = potasium carbonate
The ionic charge for CoN is -3. This is because cobalt (Co) has a 3+ charge, and nitrogen (N) has a 3- charge, resulting in a neutral ionic compound when combined.
The Chemical Formula for Aluminum carbonate is Al2(CO3)3
The number of molecules is 49,38.10e23.