Category
page 1Oxometallates
permanganate
A permanganate () is a chemical compound with the manganate(VII) ion, , the conjugate base of permanganic acid. Because the manganese atom has a +7 oxidation state, the permanganate(VII) ion is a strong oxidising agent. The ion is a transition metal ion with a tetrahedral structure. Permanganate solutions are purple in colour and are stable in neutral or slightly alkaline media.
chromate
salt or ester of a chromic acid
aluminate
In chemistry, an aluminate is a compound containing an oxyanion of aluminium, such as sodium aluminate. In the naming of inorganic compounds, it is a suffix that indicates a polyatomic anion with a central aluminium atom.

manganate
thumb|150px|Structure of manganate
In inorganic nomenclature, a manganate is any negatively charged molecular entity with manganese as the central atom. However, the name is usually used to refer to the tetraoxidomanganate(2−) anion, MnO, also known as manganate(VI) because it contains manganese in the +6 oxidation state. Manganates are the only known manganese(VI) compounds.

molybdate
thumb|150px|Structure of molybdate
thumb|150px|3D model of the molybdate ion
vanadates
thumb|150px|Structure of the orthovanadate anion
In chemistry, a vanadate is an anionic coordination complex of vanadium. Often vanadate refers to oxoanions of vanadium, most of which exist in its highest oxidation state of +5. The complexes and are referred to as hexacyanovanadate(III) and nonachlorodivanadate(III), respectively.

polyoxometalate
Polyoxometalates (POMs) are a group of inorganic, anionic molecular metal oxides.
titanate
In chemistry, titanate usually refers to inorganic compounds composed of titanium oxides, or oxides containing the titanium element. Together with niobate, titanate salts form the Perovskite group.

Cuprate
Cuprates are a class of compounds that contain copper (Cu) atom(s) in an anion. The term 'cuprate' itself originates from 'cuprum', the Latin word for copper. Cuprates appear mainly in three contexts: anionic organocopper species; inorganic, anionic coordination complexes; and complex oxides.
ferrate(VI) ion
Ferrate(VI) is the inorganic anion with the chemical formula [FeO4]2−. It is photosensitive, contributes a pale violet colour to compounds and solutions containing it and is one of the strongest water-stable oxidizing species known. Although it is classified as a weak base, concentrated solutions containing ferrate(VI) are corrosive and attack the skin and are only stable at high pH. It is similar to the somewhat more stable permanganate.
plumbate
In chemistry, a plumbate often refers to compounds that can be viewed as derivatives of the anion.
niobate
A niobate is an oxo-acid salt formed by niobium (Nb), and the common forms are metaniobate (NbO3−) and orthoniobate (NbO43−). The most common niobates are lithium niobate (LiNbO3) and potassium niobate (KNbO3).
zincate
In chemistry the term zincate may refer to several substances containing the element zinc:
usually the anion Zn(OH)42−, more properly called tetrahydroxozincate or salts thereof, such as sodium zincate .
the polymeric anion [Zn(OH)3−] and its salts, for example NaZn(OH)3· H2O.
an oxide containing zinc and a less electronegative element e.g. Na2ZnO2.
Tantalate
A tantalate is a tantalum-containing anion or a salt of such an anion. A commercially important example is heptafluorotantalate (TaF72−) and its potassium salt (K2TaF7).
thumb|right|Potassium heptafluorotantalate.
germanate
right|thumb|The orthogermanate anion
In chemistry, germanate is a compound containing an oxyanion of germanium. In the naming of inorganic compounds it is a suffix that indicates a polyatomic anion with a central germanium atom, for example potassium hexafluorogermanate, K2GeF6.
Antimonate
In chemistry an antimonate is a compound which contains a metallic element, oxygen, and antimony in an oxidation state of +5. These compounds adopt polymeric structures with M-O-Sb linkages. They can be considered to be derivatives of the hypothetical antimonic acid H3SbO4, or combinations of metal oxides and antimony pentoxide, Sb2O5.
Stannate
In chemistry, the term stannate or tinnate refers to compounds of tin (Sn). Stannic acid (Sn(OH)4), the formal precursor to stannates, does not exist and is actually a hydrate of SnO2. The term is also used in naming conventions as a suffix; for example the hexachlorostannate ion is .