Fluorocarbons
Fluoride-19 has 10 electrons (note fluoride is the ion of fluorine, if you meant fluorine, then fluoride has 9 electrons).
hydrocarbon
The compound is sodium fluoride, which is formed by the combination of sodium (Na) and fluorine (F) atoms. Sodium fluoride is commonly used in toothpaste and water fluoridation to prevent tooth decay.
DNA is not a hydrocarbon. It is a nucleic acid.
Calcium fluoride is CaF2.
There would be 4.38 moles of fluoride ions in 1.46 moles of aluminum fluoride, as the formula for aluminum fluoride is AlF3 with three fluoride ions per molecule of aluminum fluoride.
Fluoride is in many products available to the public. Fluoride is also known as Acidulated Phosphate Fluoride, Stannous Fluoride, Hydrogen Fluoride, Calcarea Fluorica, and Atomic Number 9.
No, The fluoride ion is a reduced form of fluorine.
Sodium fluoride is the only compound in sodium fluoride.
Lead fluoride, PbF2
It's potassium fluorine (fluoride? dunno about the spelling. . . DX) Hope this helps!
AgF (silver (I) fluoride or argentous fluoride is a yellow-brown color. The compound AgF2 silver (II) fluoride or argentic fluoride is white.
Zinc fluoride has a charge of +2 for zinc and -1 for fluoride, so the formula for zinc fluoride is ZnF2.
The anion fluoride is (F)-.
No. Fluoride is not flammable.
Iron III fluoride is FeF3 Note that it is iron III fluoride not iron 111 fluoride.
Sodium fluoride has a higher boiling point than lithium fluoride due to stronger intermolecular forces of attraction between sodium and fluoride ions in sodium fluoride compared to lithium and fluoride ions in lithium fluoride. This stronger bond requires more energy to break, leading to a higher boiling point for sodium fluoride.