In CH3COONO2 (sodium nitroacetate), nitrogen (N) is part of the nitro group (NO2). In this group, nitrogen typically has a formal charge of +1, as it is bonded to two oxygen atoms (one with a double bond and one with a single bond) and has one lone pair of electrons. This configuration leads to nitrogen having a total of five valence electrons, resulting in a formal charge of +1.
The charge of a nitride ion is -1 http://www.hypoidgear.com/Gear1/attachments/049_Polyatomic%20Ionic%20Compounds.pdf
Electrons have a negative charge, protons have a positive charge, and neutrons have no charge (they are neutral).
The formal charge on N in NO3 is +1. This is calculated by taking the number of valence electrons in a neutral atom (5) minus the lone pair electrons (0) minus half the bonding electrons (6/2 = 3). This gives +1 charge on N.
To calculate the number of electrons required to produce a charge of 230 microcoulombs, you can use the formula Q = N * e, where Q is the charge, N is the number of electrons, and e is the elementary charge (1.6 x 10^-19 C). Rearranging the formula, N = Q / e will give the number of electrons. Plugging in the values, N = 230 * 10^-6 / (1.6 x 10^-19) ≈ 1.44 x 10^15 electrons.
The charge on a (^{7}{14}\text{N}) nucleus can be determined by looking at its atomic number and mass number. The atomic number (7) indicates that it has 7 protons, which means the charge is +7, as protons are positively charged. The mass number (14) indicates the total number of protons and neutrons, but it does not affect the charge. Thus, the charge on a (^{7}{14}\text{N}) nucleus is +7.
-3
Generally -3 in its compounds (as in nitrides)
No it is NOT the same: Charge ( + or - ) is a different property from magnetisme (N? or S?)
you get out the charge stone after beating N
n-type and p type has net no charge because the number of proton and electron remain same in a crystal. (shahbaz)
Neutrons. Protons have negative charge, electrons have positive charge, NEUTRONS have no chargep-e+n°
N controll?
Head N*gger In Charge
The ionic charge of nitrogen (N) is typically -3, meaning it tends to gain three electrons to achieve a full outer electron shell.
first check out the total charge and the no of moles and then the n factor
The Lewis dot structure of N3 (nitrogen trihydride) consists of three nitrogen atoms bonded together by covalent bonds, with each nitrogen atom having a lone pair of electrons. The structure appears as N≡N-N with a total of 10 valence electrons.
No. The "n" and "p" does not refer to the negative or positive charge, but to the fact that there are atoms that can easily "donate" electrons (n-type), or atoms that can easily "accept" electrons (p-type).