Formula: SrSe
Copper (I) Selenide by the stock system or Cupprous Selenide by the latin system.
Thallium(III) Selenide
Hydrogen selenide is a polar compound.
The formula for titanium(II) selenide is TiSe.
The Lewis dot structure for strontium (Sr) shows it with two valence electrons, represented as Sr: ••. For selenium (Se), which has six valence electrons, the structure would be Se: •• •• ••. When forming a compound, strontium donates its two electrons to selenium, resulting in the formation of strontium selenide (SrSe), where Sr becomes a cation (Sr²⁺) and Se becomes an anion (Se²⁻). The resulting ionic bond reflects the transfer of electrons from Sr to Se.
Strontium selenide.
The name of the binary ionic compound for SrSe is strontium selenide.
Copper (I) Selenide by the stock system or Cupprous Selenide by the latin system.
lead (IV) selenide
A selenide contain the anion Se(2-).
titanium (II) selenide = SeTi
Thallium(III) Selenide
The systematic name of this ionic compound is Tin(IV) Selenide.
K2Se is potassium selenide or more precisely dipotassium selenide. As for KSe that probably doesn't exist, if it did it would be monopotassium selenide
The chemical formula for copper selenide is Cu2Se.
Hydrogen selenide is a polar compound.
The net charge of selenide is -2. Selenide is an anion that carries a charge of -2 due to the gain of two electrons in order to achieve a stable electron configuration.