ClO3 has the smaller bond angle than ClO4
Because ClO3- has a lone pair on the central Cl atom, which pushes harder away than a bond would.
ClO4 is polar.
Tetrahedral
No. Roman numerals are only for cations that aren't in either group 1 or 2. For this, you would say Chlorine Tetroxide.
Because ClO3- has a lone pair on the central Cl atom, which pushes harder away than a bond would.
Formula: Ba(ClO3)2
generally negatively charged chloride ion. but there are a few species where chlorine has positive charge like ClO3-, ClO4- etc.
It isn't actually the 'molecular' formula because it is not molecule you ask about, but here is the formula of the chlorate anion:ClO3- in which the oxidation state of Cl is +5 and of O it is -2 (as ever in oxy-compounds). (The acid of this base is HCLO3, name: hydrogen chlorate, or better known as chloric acid).
The perchlorate ion has one available bond.
Strontium and chlorine react to form strontium chloride with the formula SrCl2.
The chlorate anion is ClO3^-The perchlorate anion is ClO4^- So, the difference is that perchlorate has ONE MORE oxygen than chlorate
Chlorite ( ClO2- ) is the base anion of chlorous acid: HClO2, the Oxidation number (or state) of Cl in this compoud is +3 according to this:oxidation state−1+1+3+5+7anion namedchloridehypochloritechloritechlorateperchlorateformulaCl-ClO−ClO2−ClO3−ClO4−
That would depend on whether it is iron II chlorate or iron III chlorate. Iron II chlorate is Fe(ClO3)2. Iron III chlorate is Fe(ClO3)3
Perchlorate acid is stronger than chlorate acid. Hence, according to the conjugate base, chlorate ion becomes the stronger base of the given two.
Common compound formed using oxygen and chlorine include the complex ions: chlorate (ClO3-), perchlorate (ClO4-), chlorite (ClO2-), and hypochlorite (ClO-).
The ion [ClO4]-, assuming you meant perchlorate.Polyatomic ions are named with differed prefixes and suffixes depending on the number of atoms bonded to their central atom.Hypochlorite: [ClO]-Chlorite: [ClO2]-Chlorate: [ClO3]-PerChlorate: [ClO4]-("Per" is actually a shortening of "hyper", implying the chlorate is a "hyper" chlorate, with even more oxygen added to it.)