What Is an Ion? Cations, Anions, and Charges
A sodium atom is a soft metal that explodes in water. A sodium ion is half of ordinary table salt — completely harmless. Same element, one tiny change. That change is what makes an ion , and it's behind salts, batteries, and the signals firing in your nerves right now. The short answer: an ion is an atom (or group of atoms) that has gained or lost one or more electrons , giving it an overall electric charge. Lose electrons → positive ion. Gain electrons → negative ion. What an ion actually is Remember that a neutral atom has equal numbers of protons (+) and electrons (−), so the charges cancel. An ion forms when that balance is broken — but only the electrons move. The protons never change. That last point matters: because the proton count stays the same, it's still the same element . A sodium ion is still sodium; it has just lost an electron and picked up a charge. Lose electrons → fewer negatives than positives → a positive ion (a cation ). Gain electrons → more...