When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ammonium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium

    Infobox references. Ammonium is a modified form of ammonia that has an extra hydrogen atom. It is a positively charged (cationic) molecular ion with the chemical formula NH+ 4 or [NH4]+. It is formed by the addition of a proton (a hydrogen nucleus) to ammonia (NH3).

  3. Ammonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonia

    However, the description Pliny gives of the salt does not conform to the properties of ammonium chloride. According to Herbert Hoover's commentary in his English translation of Georgius Agricola's De re metallica, it is likely to have been common sea salt. [20] In any case, that salt ultimately gave ammonia and ammonium compounds their name.

  4. Ammonium chloride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium_chloride

    Infobox references. Ammonium chloride is an inorganic chemical compound with the chemical formula N H 4 Cl, also written as [NH4]Cl. It is an ammonium salt of hydrogen chloride. It consists of ammonium cations [NH4]+ and chloride anions Cl−. It is a white crystalline salt that is highly soluble in water.

  5. Ion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion

    Ammonia and ammonium have the same number of electrons in essentially the same electronic configuration, but ammonium has an extra proton that gives it a net positive charge. Ammonia can also lose an electron to gain a positive charge, forming the ion NH + 3.

  6. Ammonia solution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonia_solution

    Ammonia solution, also known as ammonia water, ammonium hydroxide, ammoniacal liquor, ammonia liquor, aqua ammonia, aqueous ammonia, or (inaccurately) ammonia, is a solution of ammonia in water. It can be denoted by the symbols NH 3 (aq). Although the name ammonium hydroxide suggests a salt with the composition [NH+4] [OH−], it is actually ...

  7. Chemical polarity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_polarity

    Two charges are present with a negative charge in the middle (red shade), and a positive charge at the ends (blue shade). In chemistry, polarity is a separation of electric charge leading to a molecule or its chemical groups having an electric dipole moment, with a negatively charged end and a positively charged end.

  8. Formal charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formal_charge

    Formal charge. In chemistry, a formal charge (F.C. or q*), in the covalent view of chemical bonding, is the hypothetical charge assigned to an atom in a molecule, assuming that electrons in all chemical bonds are shared equally between atoms, regardless of relative electronegativity. [1][2] In simple terms, formal charge is the difference ...

  9. Ammonium bromide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonium_bromide

    Infobox references. Ammonium bromide, NH 4 Br, is the ammonium salt of hydrobromic acid. The chemical crystallizes in colorless prisms, possessing a saline taste; it sublimes on heating and is easily soluble in water. On exposure to air it gradually assumes a yellow color because of the oxidation of traces of bromide (Br −) to bromine (Br 2).