What is the net ionic equation of potassium carbonate combines with strontium hydroxide?

Write the molecular equation and balance it.

Convert the molecular equation into an ionic (total ionic) equation. The rules are as follows: solids(insoluble materials formed) are written as the molecule, gases are written as the molecule, weak electrolytes are written as the molecule. All others are written as separate ions.
Finally, cancel those ions that are common to both sides. What is left is the NET ionic equation.

Do what you can and explain what you don't understand about the part where you are stuck.

To determine the net ionic equation for the combination of potassium carbonate (K2CO3) and strontium hydroxide (Sr(OH)2), we need to start by writing the balanced chemical equation.

The chemical equation is as follows:

K2CO3 + Sr(OH)2 ->

Now, let's break down the compounds into their respective ions:

K2CO3 breaks down into the cation potassium (K+) and the anion carbonate (CO3^2-).
Sr(OH)2 breaks down into the cation strontium (Sr^2+) and two hydroxide ions (OH-).

The balanced equation with the ions is:

2K+ + CO3^2- + Sr^2+ + 2OH- ->

Next, we need to identify any ions that are both reactants and products and remove them from the equation to get the net ionic equation.

In this case, the potassium cation (K+) is common on both sides and cancels out. The remaining ions are CO3^2- (from K2CO3) and Sr^2+ (from Sr(OH)2):

CO3^2- + Sr^2+ + 2OH- ->

This is the net ionic equation for the combination of potassium carbonate and strontium hydroxide. It represents the overall chemical change that occurs during the reaction.