Monatomic ion
A monatomic ion (also called simple ion[1][2]) 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.[3] For example, calcium carbonate consists of the monatomic ion Ca2+ and the polyatomic ion CO2−
3.
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+ 
See also
    
- monatomic
- polyatomic ion
- diatomic cations
- triatomic cations
- diatomic anion
- triatomic anion
References
    
- admin (2018-01-10). "List of Polyatomic Ions and Charges - Freakgenie". Retrieved 2022-04-13.
- https://www.mtsu.edu/chemistry/chem1010/pdfs/Chapter%203Ions%20Ionic%20Compounds%20and%20Nomenclature.pdf
- William Masterton; Cecile Hurley (24 January 2008). Chemistry: Principles and Reactions. Cengage Learning. p. 176. ISBN 0-495-12671-3.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.