Monatomic ion
A monatomic ion is an ion consisting of exactly one atom. If an ion contains more than one atom, even if these are of the same element, it is called a polyatomic ion.[1] For example, calcium carbonate consists of the monatomic ion Ca2+ and the polyatomic ion CO32−.
A type I binary ionic compound contains a metal (cation) that forms only one type of ion. A type II ionic compound contains a metal that forms more than one type of ion, i.e., ions with different charges.
Common type I cations | |
---|---|
Hydrogen | H+ |
Lithium | Li+ |
Sodium | Na+ |
Potassium | K+ |
Rubidium | Rb+ |
Caesium | Cs+ |
Magnesium | Mg2+ |
Calcium | Ca2+ |
Strontium | Sr2+ |
Barium | Ba2+ |
Aluminium | Al3+ |
Silver | Ag+ |
Zinc | Zn2+ |
Common type II cations | ||
---|---|---|
iron(II) | Fe2+ | ferrous |
iron(III) | Fe3+ | ferric |
copper(II) | Cu2+ | cupric |
copper(I) | Cu+ | cuprous |
Common anions | |
---|---|
hydride | H− |
fluoride | F− |
chloride | Cl− |
bromide | Br− |
iodide | I− |
oxide | O2− |
sulfide | S2− |
nitride | N3− |
phosphide | P3− |
See also
- monatomic
- polyatomic ion
- diatomic cations
- triatomic cations
- diatomic anion
- triatomic anion
References
- William Masterton; Cecile Hurley (24 January 2008). Chemistry: Principles and Reactions. Cengage Learning. p. 176. ISBN 0-495-12671-3.
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