What is the charge on a carbonate ion (CO3)2?Compared to the number of protons, how many electrons does the carbonate ion have?

1 Answer
Dec 19, 2015

The carbonate dianion MUST have 2 more electrons than it does nuclear protons. Let's see if it does.

Explanation:

The number of nuclear protons are the number of positively charged particles contained in atomic nuclei. Z, the atomic number, =6 for carbon, and 8 for oxygen. In the carbonate atom nuclei there are therefore 30 positively charged protons.

So how many electrons on carbonate? There are 6 from carbon, 24 from oxygen, PLUS 2 extra negatively charged particles from the formal charge on the anion. 32 electronic charges (32) versus 30 protonic charges (+30). There is a formal charge of 2 on the carbonate anions, the which we conceive to be on the oxygen atoms (the doubly bound oxygen is neutral, whereas each of the singly bound oxygen atoms bears a negative charge), to give O=C(O)2

Of course this assignment of charge is a formalism; and we would distribute the charge over the oxygen centres by resonance.