This is known as a Nitrate, the 'ate' ending means it has Oxygen in it, the 'Nitr' represents the Nitrogen part.
The PO4^3- ion is a polyatomic anion. It consists of a group of atoms with an overall negative charge.
The polyatomic ion sulfite = SO3-2
If the name of a compound ends in -ate, it indicates that the compound likely contains oxygen along with the central element. The -ate ending generally indicates a polyatomic anion or anion complex in the compound.
When KOH is placed in water, it ionizes to K+ and OH-, so the polyatomic ion is the OH- (hydroxyl anion).
IT is a negatively charged ion consisting of more than one atom
An example of this type of compound is ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4, where the polyatomic cation is ammonium (NH4+) and the polyatomic anion is sulfate (SO4^2-). In this case, the atoms in the sulfate anion are all from the same group in the periodic table (Group 16 or the oxygen family).
NO such molecule as 'So32'. If you mean 'SO3^(2-)' this is the sulphite anion. NB There is no element with the initials 'So'. or no molecule with '32' oxygen atoms to one sulphur atom.
This is a polyatomic anion.
The PO4^3- ion is a polyatomic anion. It consists of a group of atoms with an overall negative charge.
Sulfite anion is the chemical name for SO32-
The chemical name for an ionic compound with a polyatomic cation and polyatomic anion would typically be named using the names of the individual ions. The cation would be named first followed by the anion, with the ending of the anion typically changed to "-ide," similar to naming binary ionic compounds.
polyatomic anion
3 and SO3 is an anion with a +1 charge
A polyatomic anion is a tightly bound group of atoms that behaves as a unit and has a negative charge.A monatomic anion consists of a single atom with a negative charge.
Polyatomic ions are named with their specific names, regardless of their overall charge. When naming an ionic compound with a polyatomic ion, the name of the cation is written first followed by the name of the anion (polyatomic ion).
Sulfite = SO3-2Not to be confused as Sulfide
Identify the polyatomic anion present in the acid. Add the prefix "hydro-" to the name of the polyatomic anion. Replace the suffix "-ate" with "-ic" or "-ite" with "-ous" in the anion name. Add the word "acid" at the end. Example: HClO3 is named chloric acid.