ion

listen to the pronunciation of ion
English - Turkish

Definition of ion in English Turkish dictionary

İon
(Mitoloji) Ksausthos ile Kreuse'nin oğlu. Hellen'in torunu İonia'lar adlarını İon dan aldılar
ion acceleration
iyon ivmesi
ion accelerator
iyon hızlandırıcı
ion beam
iyon demeti
ion burn
iyon yanması
ion concentration
iyon yoğunluğu
ion counter
iyon sayacı
ion cyclotron frequency
iyon siklotron frekansı
ion dose
iyon dozu
ion exchange
iyon değişimi
ion exchange
iyon alışverişi
ion exchange
iyon değiş tokuşu
ion exchange chromatography
iyon alış veriş kromatografisi
ion exchanger
iyon değiştirici
ion flotation
iyonlu yüzdürme
ion implantation
iyon katkılama
ion migration
iyon göçü
ion pair
iyon çifti
ion pump
iyon pompası
ion source
iyon kaynağı
ion spectrum
iyon spektrumu
ion spectrum
iyon izgesi
ion spot
iyon beneği
ion trap
iyon kapanı
ion peeing
İyon salınımı
ion burning
iyon yakmasi
ion chamber
(Askeri) İYON ODASI: Bak. "ionization chamber"
ion chamber pocket dosemeter
(Nükleer Bilimler) iyon odalı cep dozimetresi
ion density
iyon yogunlugu
ion engine
(Askeri) İYON MOTORU (HV.): Füze veya uzay aracını sevkedecek itiş gücü; atom füzyonu, atom parçalanması veya güneş enerjisinden alınmış iyonlanmış bir atom tanecikleri akımı ile elde edilen bir motor tipi
ion exchange resin
(Nükleer Bilimler) iyon değiştiriciler
ion implantation
(Nükleer Bilimler) iyon ekme
ion rocket
(Askeri) İYON ROKETİ (HV.): Halen gelişme halinde bir uzay aracı güç kaynağı yüksek süratte bir iyon akımı püskürtmek suretiyle elde edilen reaksiyonla sevk gücü meydana getirir
ion-exchange
iyon değişmesi
ion-exchange
iyon-değişim
counter ion
(Denizbilim) karşıt yükün
ions
(Fizik,Tıp,Teknik) iyonlar

Pozitif iyonlara katyonlar denir. - Positive ions are called cations.

adsorbed ion
adsorbe edilmiş iyon
carbenium ion
karbenyum iyonu
common ion effect
ortak iyon etkisi
complex ion
kompleks iyon
counter ion
karşı iyon
dipolar ion
dipolar iyon
hydrogen ion
hidrojen iyonu
hydrogen ion concentration
hidrojen iyon konsantrasyonu
hydrogen ion concentration
hidrojen iyonu konsantrasyonu
hydronium ion
hidronyum iyonu
hydroxide ion
hidroksit iyonu
hydroxonium ion
hidroksonyum iyonu
hydroxyl ion
hidroksil iyonu
positive ion
pozitif iyon
twitter ion
ikiz iyon
excited ion
uyarik iyon, eksite iyon
lithium-ion
(Kimya) Lityum-iyon
lithium-ion battery
lityum-iyon pil
electron/ion avalanche
elektron/iyon cigi
excited ion
(Fizik) uyarılmış iyon
hydrogen-ion concentration
hidrojen-iyon derişimi/konsantrasyonu
large-ion lithophile
büyük iyonlu litofil elementler
master ferric ion solution
(Nükleer Bilimler) referans ferrik iyon çözeltisi
negative ion
(Tekstil) negatif iyon ( anion )
neon ion irradiation
(Tıp) neon iyonları ile ışınlama
sensitive high-resulution ion microprobe
hassas yüksek çözünürlüklü iyon mikroprobu
without ion
iyonsuz
Turkish - Turkish
Yunan mimarisindeki üç biçimden biri
English - English
An atom or group of atoms bearing an electrical charge such as the sodium and chlorine atoms in a salt solution
At ordinary pressures each ion seems to include also a number of attached molecules
At low pressures the negative ions appear to be electrons; the positive ions, atoms minus an electron
Anion, Cation
1 A charged atom or molecularly bound group of atoms; sometimes also a free electron or other charged subatomic particle
One of the electrified particles into which, according to the electrolytic dissociation theory, the molecules of electrolytes are divided by water and other solvents
An atom or molecule with a positive or negative electrical charge Positively charged ions are cations, and negatively charged ions are anions
Cf
Ions may be formed in a gas in various ways
An atom or group of atoms that carries a positive or negative electric charge as a result of having lost or gained one or more electrons
An atom that has become electrically charged by the addition or loss of one or more electrons
An atom or a compound with a net (positive or negative) electrical charge
To the properties and behavior of ions the phenomena of the electric discharge through rarefied gases and many other important effects are ascribed
a particle that is electrically charged (positive or negative); an atom or molecule or group that has lost or gained one or more electrons
An atom or group of atoms which functions as a unit, and has a positive or negative electrical charge, due to the gain or loss of one or more electrons (see Ionization)
One of the small electrified particles into which the molecules of a gas are broken up under the action of the electric current, of ultraviolet and certain other rays, and of high temperatures
A charged particle
An atom that has lost or gained one or more electrons and has become electrically charged as a result
An atom that has lost or gained one or more electrons, thereby becoming electrically charged
Atom that carries a positive or negative charge because of the loss or gain of an electron
Those which are positively electrified (hydrogen and the metals) are called cations; negative ions (hydroxyl and acidic atoms or groups) are called anions
an electrically charged particle
Ions are electrically charged atoms. Ionic. an atom which has been given a positive or negative force by adding or taking away an electron (present participle of ienai ). Atom or group of atoms with one or more positive or negative electric charges. Positively charged ions are cations, negatively charged ones anions. Ions are formed when electrons are added to or removed from neutral molecules or other ions, as sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl) atoms react to form Na^+ and Cl^-; when ions combine with other particles, as hydrogen cations (H^+) and ammonia (NH3) combine to form ammonium cations (NH4^+); or when a covalent bond between two atoms is ruptured in such a way that the resulting particles are charged, as water (H2O) dissociates (see dissociation) into hydrogen and hydroxide ions (H^+ and OH^-). Many crystalline substances (see crystal) are composed of ions held in regular geometric patterns by the attraction of oppositely charged particles for each other. Ions migrate to the electrode of opposite charge in an electric field and are the conductors of current in electrolytic cells (see electrolysis). Compounds that form ions are called electrolytes. Ions are also formed in gases when heated to very high temperatures or when an electrical discharge passes through them (see plasma)
an electrically charged atom, radical (such as SO42-), or molecule formed by the loss or gain of one or more electrons
An atom or molecule that has acquired an electrical charge by the loss or gain of electrons When electrons are stripped from hydrogen atoms in the anode side of the fuel cell, the atoms become positively charged hydrogen protons, which are ions search
An ion is an atom or group of atoms that carries a positive or negative electrical charge because of having lost or gained one or more electrons [134]
an isolated electron or positron; an atom or molecule which by loss or gain of one or more electrons has acquired a net electric charge
an atom or group of atoms that has acquired an electric charge by gaining or losing one or more electrons
An atom or molecular fragment that has a positive electrical charge due to the loss of one or more electrons; the simplest ion is the hydrogen nucleus, a single proton
An atom or molecule which has gained or lost one or more electrons, thereby having a net negative or positive electrical charge A fusion plasma is so hot that virtually all the electrons are stripped from the atoms creating ions that have a net positive charge equal to the number of protons in their nucleus
4 x 10-10 electrostatic units, or a multiple of this
{i} (Physics, Chemistry) electrically charged atom formed by the loss or gain of an electron; electrically charged particle formed in a gas
An atom or group of atoms that is not electrically neutral but instead carries a positive or negative electric charge
Usually an atom which has lost or gained one or more electrons and is left with a charge
An atomic particle that is electrically charged, either negative or positive
a positively or negatively charged atom produced through loss or gain of one or more electrons
One of the elements which appear at the respective poles when a body is subjected to electro-chemical decomposition
A noun suffix denoting act, process, result of an act or a process, thing acted upon, state, or condition; as, revolution, the act or process of revolving; construction, the act or process of constructing; a thing constructed; dominion, territory ruled over; subjection, state of being subject; dejection; abstraction
Atomic particle, atom, or chemical radical bearing an electrical charge, either negative or positive
An atom which has had one or more of its electrons removed, leaving the atom with a net positive electrical charge equal and opposite to the charge of the electrons which have been removed
An ion consists of one or more atoms and carries a unit charge of electricity, 3
An atom or molecule that has a net electrical charge from gaining or losing electrons ionization potential - A measure of the energy required to remove an electron from an atom or ion
An atom or a group of atoms that carries an electric charge
les
retract
reconstruct
ion channel
a protein complex or single protein which penetrates a cell membrane and catalyzes the passage of specific ions through that membrane

Ion channels, which facilitate this movement, are protein assemblies that penetrate the membrane and catalyze passage of specific ions such as sodium (Na+), potassium (K+), or calcium (Ca2+) into or out of the cell down the electrochemical gradient.

ion channelopathy
Any of several inherited diseases in which alterations in the control of ion conductance through the central pore of ion channels impair cell functions
ion channels
plural form of ion channel May refer to either multiple ion channel classes or to multiple members of a single class
ion engine
a type of spacecraft propulsion, whereby electric fields accelerate ions out the exhaust to provide motive force
ion engines
plural form of ion engine
ion exchange
the reversible process whereby ions are exchanged between a solution and a solid or gel; the process used in a water softener
ion exchange chromatography
A technique that uses ion exchange to separate compounds, anions and cations according to their electrical properties
ion exchange resin
An insoluble matrix of small beads having a charged surface; used as an artificial zeolite in water softeners and in ion exchange chromatography
ion exchange resins
plural form of ion exchange resin
ion milling
The use of a beam of high-energy ions to remove material from a surface
ion mirrors
plural form of ion mirror
ion selective electrode
An electrode whose potential is dependent on the concentration of a specific ion in the solution in which it is immersed
ion-selective electrode
an electrode, that is used to measure the concentration of a specific ion in a solution by use of a ion-selective membrane
ion-selective membrane
a membrane (e.g. of a chalcogenide glass) across which an electrical potential differs according to the concentration of a specific ion; used in ion-selective electrodes and in electrodialysis
ion beam
a beam of ions moving in the same direction at the same speed
ion beam
ray of negatively-charged atomic particles
ion engine
A rocket engine that develops thrust by expelling ions rather than gaseous combustion products. Also called ion rocket
ion engine
a type of reaction-propulsion engine to propel rockets in space; a stream of positive ions is accelerated to a high velocity by an electric field
ion exchange
a process in which ions are exchanged between a solution and an insoluble (usually resinous) solid; widely used in industrial processing
ion exchange
A reversible chemical reaction between an insoluble solid and a solution during which ions may be interchanged, used in water softening and in the separation of radioactive isotopes
ion exchanger
active transport mechanism (molecule) that uses the potential energy in the electrochemical gradients to pump one ionic species into the cell and another species out of the cell
ion exchanger
A permanent, insoluble material which contains ions that will exchange reversibly with other ions in a surrounding solution Both cation and anion exchangers are used in water conditioning
ion exchanger
Synthetic resins that are able to change certain undesirable ions into more desirable ones
ion implantation
The process by which dopants are introduced in exact quantities into silicon A stream of charged particles (called ions) of phosphorus, arsenic, or boron is created and then directed at a silicon wafer at a precisely controlled velocity (energy) In this way both the concentration and depth of the dopant can be controlled back to top
ion implantation
Process of adding materials to the surface of a wafer that will conduct electricity 3 26
ion implantation
A means for adding dopants to semiconductor material Charged atoms (ions) of elements such as boron, phosphorus, or arsenic are accelerated by an electric field into the material Useful for very shallow (<1µ) and precise distributions of dopants
ion microscope
A field-ion microscope
ion pump
a vacuum pump that removes gas by ionizing the atoms or molecules and adsorbing them on a metal surface
ion trap
A device, such as a magnet, used to prevent ions in an electron beam from striking other apparatus
ion-exchange resin
Any of a wide variety of synthetic polymers containing positively or negatively charged sites that can interact with or bind to an ion of opposite charge from a surrounding solution. Light, porous solids in granules, beads, or sheets, they absorb the solution and swell as they attract the target ions; when exhausted, they are removed from use and regenerated by an inexpensive brine or carbonate solution. A solid support of styrene-divinylbenzene copolymer to which are attached sulfonic or carboxylic acid groups is often used to attract and exchange cations (e.g., ions of hydrogen or metals). Quaternary ammonium groups on the solid matrix are used to attract anions (e.g., ions of chlorine). Industrially, the resins are used to soften hard water, purify sugar, and concentrate valuable elements (gold, silver, uranium) from their ores. In the laboratory they are used to separate and concentrate substances and sometimes as catalysts. Zeolites are minerals with ion-exchange properties
-ion
an action or process, or the result of an action or process

fermentation, indentation, consumption.

-ion
a state or condition

intoxication.

alkanium ion
Any carbocation obtained by hydrogenation of an alkane
amidium ion
Any cation formed by the addition of a proton to the nitrogen or oxygen atom of an amide or derivative
aminium ion
A cation formed by protonation of an amine - R3NH+
arenium ion
Any cation formed by the addition of a proton or other cationic species to an arene
arenonium ion
An arenium ion
arsanylium ion
any organic derivative of this cation
arsanylium ion
the cation H2As+ derived from arsine
benzenium ion
Any arenium ion derived from benzene or its derivatives
benzenonium ion
A benzenium ion
bromonium ion
Any halonium ion in which the halogen is bromine
carbenium ion
any carbocation containing a tervalent carbon atom
carbonium ion
a carbenium ion or any carbocation
chloronium ion
any halonium ion in which the halogen is chlorine
complex ion
any ion containing more than one atom. e.g. sulphate as opposed to sulphide
complex ion
any ion in which a central metal atom (normally a transition element) is surrounded by a group of ions or molecules (ligands). e.g. ferricyanide
fluoronium ion
any halonium ion in which the halogen is fluorine
halonium ion
any cation of the general formula R2X+, where X is any halogen
heavy ion
An ionized atom that is usually heavier than helium
hydrogen ion
a bare hydrogen nucleus; a proton , deuteron or triton
hydrogen ion
a proton combined with one or more water molecules; usually written H3O+ and called the hydronium ion though is best considered as H9O4+ but is often written H+(aq) for simplicity
hydrogen ion
H- or H+
iodonium ion
any halonium ion in which the halogen is iodine
oxylium ion
Any cation of general formula R-O+
radical ion
Any radical that also carries an electric charge; typically, the charge and unpaired electron are associated with the same atom
secondary ion mass spectrometry
A technique used to visualize the three-dimensional structure of solids by employing an energetic ion beam to fragment the atomic or molecular constituents from a surface
lithium-ion battery
(Elektrik, Elektronik) A lithium-ion battery (sometimes Li-ion battery or LIB) is a family of rechargeable battery types in which lithium ions move from the negative electrode to the positive electrode during discharge, and back when charging. Chemistry, performance, cost, and safety characteristics vary across LIB types. Unlike lithium primary batteries (which are disposable), lithium-ion electrochemical cells use an intercalated lithium compound as the electrode material instead of metallic lithium
calcium ion
ion of calcium; a factor in the clotting of blood
hydrogen ion
The positively charged ion of hydrogen, H+, formed by removal of the electron from atomic hydrogen and found in all aqueous solutions of acids
hydrogen ion
a positively charged atom of hydrogen; that is to say, a normal hydrogen atomic nucleus
hydrogen ion concentration
the number of moles of hydrogen ions per cubic decimeter
hydroxide ion
The ion OH-, characteristic of basic hydroxides. Also called hydroxyl ion
hydroxide ion
the anion OH having one oxygen and one hydrogen atom
ions
the atoms of potassium, sodium and calcium have very small charges of electrical energy, the charge may be positive or negative With the electrocardiogram we measure the movement of these ions in the heart tissue cells The movement of calcium cells within the AV node are responsible for the impulse generation Most of the hearts tissue cells are sodium dependant
ions
Elements or molecules that have a positive or negative charge that are responsible for the salinity of stream water and can indicate the source of the water
ions
atoms or molecules that have gained or lost electrons and therefore have electrical charges; examples include the positively charged sodium ion (Na+) and the negatively charged chloride ion (Cl-)
ions
Electrically charged particles which are found in water after salts have dissolved
ions
Electrically charged atoms that have gained or lost electrons
ions
an atom with one or more electrons stripped off, giving it a net positive charge
ions
An electrically charged atom or group of atoms Such loss or gain of electrons occurs during chemical reactions in which electrons are transferred from one atom to another; by the action of matter on x-rays, UV light and certain other forms of radiant energy or by the impact of alpha and beta particles, protons or deuterons, etc on atoms and molecules
ions
an atom that has lost or gained one or more electrons Thus, a positively charged ion is one that has lost an electron and a negatively charged ion is one that has gained an electron
ions
plural of ion
ions
Atoms or groups of atoms that have an electrical charge
ions
the electrically charged state that an element assumes in true solution In the ionic state, ions are chemically reactive
ions
an atom or molecules which has a net electrical charge This may be caused by the
ions
Atoms or molecules in which the number of electrons do not equal the number of protons, giving it either a positive or negative charge Positively-charged ions are called "cations," while negatively-charged ions are called "anions "
ions
Atoms which have either lost or gained electrons, so they have gained a positive or a negative charge
ions
Ions are atoms with an electrical charge This charge comes from either losing or gaining electrons If the atom has lost electrons, it will be desparate to get some more, and if it has extra electrons it will be desparate to lose them, as atoms like to be electrically neutral This means that ions will react with most things, possibly damaging them
ions
Atoms or groups of atoms that are electrically charged as a result of the loss (cation) or gain of electrons (anion)
ions
Atoms or groups of atoms that have picked up a positive or negative electrical charge
ions
Atoms, groups of atoms, or compounds, that are electrically charged as a result of the loss of electrons (cations) or the gain of electrons (anions)
ions
Positively or negatively charged molecules due to an unequal number of protons (+) and electrons (-), mostly one, two, or three Salts are composed of pairs of ions that readily dissolve in water Important metal ions in cells are sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, zinc and iron The positively charged metal ions are always found with an equal number of negatively charged counter ions like chloride or phosphate
ions
An atom or group of atoms that carry a positive or negative charge, and are usually found in solution
ions
An electrically charged particle created in a gas, as by an electric discharge
ion

    Hyphenation

    i·on

    Turkish pronunciation

    ayın

    Pronunciation

    /ˈīən/ /ˈaɪən/

    Etymology

    () From Ancient Greek iόn (iōn, “going”), neuter present participle of εἶμι (eimi, “I go”).
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