Aluminum (Al) always forms a 3+ cation in its 3rd period of the Periodic Table.
Silver
Br is an anion. It is called bromide and is the ion form of the element bromine.
a cation is a positvely charged atom, and if an element is positive, then you add "ion" to the end of the element. for example, sodium becomes sodium ion or Na1+ A Cation is a positive ion, that is, one that has fewer than four valence electrons. Some examples of elements that form cations are: * Lithium (Li) * Beryllium (Be) * Boron (B) * Sodium (Na) * Magnesium (Mg) * Aluminum (Al) * Potassium (K) * Calcium (Ca)
Silver forms a cation with a charge of +1, represented as Ag+.
Aluminium, like most metals, forms cations easier than it does anions. The most common for aluminum is Al3+, when it has lost three electrons.
Aluminum
Cesium is a cation, as it has a positive charge due to losing an electron.
The cation is the metal "Cu", otherwise known as the element Copper.
Oxygen is an element. It normally forms anions.
Silver
Gallium is a metallic element. It forms cations Ga3+ and Ga+
A single element cation and single element anion form a binary ionic compound, where one element is a metal and the other is a nonmetal. The metal forms the cation by losing electrons, while the nonmetal forms the anion by gaining electrons. Examples include NaCl (sodium chloride) and KBr (potassium bromide).
Silver is normally not a cation or an anion, it is an element. Once it becomes an ion however, it will become a CATION with a +1 charge (Ag^+).
No, iodine is not a cation. Iodine is a non-metal halogen element that typically forms an anion in chemical reactions by gaining an electron to achieve a stable electron configuration.
Strontium can be a neutral atom or a cation.
The third period element that forms a 3- ion is sulfur.
The element with 10 electrons when it forms a cation with a 1 plus charge is Neon (Ne). Neon has an atomic number of 10, which means it has 10 protons and 10 electrons. The cation is formed when an electron is removed from Neon, leaving it with 9 protons and 1 electron, giving it a 1+ charge. Neon's atomic number: 10 Neon's electrons when forming a cation: 10 Neon's protons when forming a cation: 9 Neon's charge when forming a cation: 1+