(NH4)+ is a cation (ammonium).
The cation of NH4Cl is NH4+, which is the ammonium ion.
Ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) is a base. The cation (NH4)+ is low acidic.
NH4 contain 22,22 % hydrogen.
Not sure what the word isobal might be. BH4- and NH4+ are isoelectronic. BF4- and NH4+ are both tetrahedral and have the same geometry.
To determine the number of grams in 2.80 moles of (NH4)2SO3, you need to multiply the molar mass of (NH4)2SO3 by the number of moles. The molar mass of (NH4)2SO3 is 132.14 g/mol, so 2.80 moles of (NH4)2SO3 would be equal to 2.80 moles x 132.14 g/mol = 369.392 grams of (NH4)2SO3.
No, NH4+ is not a radical. It is an ion called ammonium, composed of one nitrogen atom and four hydrogen atoms, with a positive charge. A radical is a species with unpaired electrons, while NH4+ has no unpaired electrons.
Ammonia a base, but it is not a radical; ammonium (NH4+) is a radical.
The name of NH4+ is ammonium ion. Its chemical formula is NH4+.
NH4+ is the ammonium radical, which consists of one nitrogen and four hydrogen atoms in an ionized state. It is a compound radical because it has more than one atom. An ion that consists of just one atom, such as Na+ is not a compound.
Ammonia a base, but it is not a radical; ammonium (NH4+) is a radical.
You are thinking of the ammonium radical, NH4-.
The chemical symbol for ammonium is NH4, and it has a valency of 1. Remember ammonium is a radical.
NH4NO3 - ammonium nitrate. (since the valencies of both radical are 1).
"NH4" I assume is NH4+This is the ammonium ion.
NH4 is colorless.
NH3Cr2o7 is ammonium dichromate and CoCl3 is cobalt III Chloride
NH4 is the chemical formula of the cation ammonium - (NH4)+.