Physics, asked by sisindrirovk, 9 months ago

classify the metal and non-metal in Annapurna salt​

Answers

Answered by sivasujithkumar
0

Answer:

A salt is defined as: “A chemical compound consisting of an assembly of cations and anions.”  In other words, you need to have a compound that contains ionic bonds.

It is not the case that any metal and any non metal can form an ionic bond. A rough approximation is to look at the electronegativity difference

A good rule of thumb is that if the difference between the two numbers for each element is about 1.7ish or larger then the bond is ionic.

In even simpler terms look at the table above. Anything that is either purple, dark blue or light blue will form a salt with anything in red, orange and pink. The two clear exceptions are the two noble gases which are Kr (pink) and Xe (orange). These react with barely anything so just ignore them in terms of salt formation!

Explanation:

Answered by jitumahi435
0

We have to classify: the metal and non-metal in annapurna salt​.

Solution:

In chemistry,

A salt is a solid chemical compound  which consist of an ionic assembly of cations and anions:

Annapurna salts are composed of related numbers of cations (+vely charged ions) and anions (-vely charged ions). The product is electrically neutral. These component ions can be inorganic, such as chloride (Cl^-), or organic, such as acetate (CH_3CO^{-2}); and can be monatomic, such as fluoride (F^-) or polyatomic, such as sulfate (SO_4^{2-}).

Similar questions