Fluoride Symbol Copy and Paste
Press the Copy button beside F⁻, then paste it with Ctrl+V on Windows, Command+V on Mac, or the Paste command on mobile.
Find more characters through the homepage collection of e symbols.
- 1Copy
Press the button to copy F⁻.
- 2Place the cursor
Open the message, document, form, or profile where you need it.
- 3Paste
Use Ctrl+V, Command+V, or the mobile Paste command.
What Is the Fluoride Symbol?
F⁻ is the chemical notation for the fluoride ion: the element symbol F with a single negative charge.
Chemical equations
Water chemistry
Dental-science references
Laboratory reports
Related forms
Fluoride Symbol Variants and Related Forms
Plain minus form
Fluoride with a baseline minus
Sodium fluoride
Neutral ionic compound
Hydrogen fluoride
Different molecular species
Chloride Symbol Cl⁻
Cl⁻ is a common chemical notation for the chloride ion: the element…
Iodide Symbol I⁻
I⁻ is the chemical notation for the iodide ion: the element symbol…
Sodium Symbol Na
Na is the IUPAC chemical symbol for sodium, element 11. It is…
Ammonia Symbol NH₃
NH₃ is the molecular formula for ammonia: one nitrogen atom and three…
Ammonium Symbol NH₄⁺
NH₄⁺ is the chemical formula for the ammonium ion: one nitrogen atom,…
How to Type the Fluoride Symbol
Choose your device or app to insert the fluoride symbol without copying it from another page.
Fluoride Symbol on Windows
Copy F⁻ from this page or enter the complete sequence U+0046 U+207B in a Unicode-aware editor.
Fluoride Symbol on Mac
Open Character Viewer with Control+Command+Space and search for the first character name, or copy F⁻ from this page.
Fluoride Symbol on iPhone and iPad
Tap the copy button for F⁻, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.
Fluoride Symbol on Android
Tap the copy button for F⁻, then paste it into the target app. Save it as a text replacement for repeated use.
Fluoride Symbol on Chromebook
Copy F⁻ as the complete sequence so its component characters remain in order.
Fluoride Symbol on Microsoft Word
Insert or type each character in the sequence U+0046 U+207B, or paste F⁻ as a complete unit.
Fluoride Symbol on Google Docs
Use Insert > Special characters and search by the Unicode name, or paste F⁻ from this page.
Fluoride Symbol Unicode and HTML Codes
Use these values when you need the fluoride symbol in HTML, CSS, source code, or a character reference.
U+0046 U+207B
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F + SUPERSCRIPT MINUS
F ⁻
F ⁻
46 207B
How to Use and Format the Fluoride Symbol
Format F⁻ according to the specific role defined for Fluoride Symbol. F⁻ is the chemical notation for the fluoride ion: the element symbol F with a single negative charge. The encoded form is U+0046 U+207B; preserve the complete sequence, capitalization, charge, unit letters, diacritics, or operator structure exactly as shown. For Fluoride Symbol, placement and spacing should follow the scientific, mathematical, editorial, musical, currency, or interface convention required by its actual use.
This page covers F⁻ as an ion formula. It is not elemental fluorine F₂, a temperature unit, or a hazard label by itself. When fluoride symbol communicates an action, quantity, relation, category, warning, or status, include nearby readable wording and an accessible name. Test fluoride symbol in the actual website, document, font, export format, and assistive-technology workflow rather than accepting a merely similar glyph.
In chemical equations, identify F⁻ as Fluoride Symbol and explain the exact role it performs before the reader relies on it.
For water chemistry, retain the sequence U+0046 U+207B; do not silently replace F⁻ with the related form F−.
When fluoride symbol appears in dental-science references, apply this convention: Preserve element capitalization, subscripts, and ionic charges.
While preparing laboratory reports, compare F⁻ with NaF and HF, then keep the version whose meaning matches the source.
Encode fluoride symbol as UTF-8 or the numeric references F ⁻ and F ⁻ so the published text remains searchable and selectable.
Give F⁻ the readable label “Fluoride Symbol” wherever the surrounding sentence, formula, score, table, or control does not already state the meaning.
Test fluoride symbol in the final font, mobile layout, PDF export, copy workflow, and screen-reader output before release.
Fluoride Symbol Examples
F⁻NaF → Na⁺ + F⁻Fluoride concentration: F⁻Ion charge: −1Accessible reading: fluoride ion, F minusUnicode sequence for Fluoride Symbol: U+0046 U+207BHTML decimal: F ⁻HTML hexadecimal: F ⁻CSS escapes: 46 207BAccessible text label: Fluoride Symbol
Common Fluoride Symbol Mistakes
- Using F− where F⁻ is required changes the intended fluoride symbol or introduces a different code point.
- Dropping part of U+0046 U+207B while copying fluoride symbol into chemical equations.
- Applying the wrong convention to fluoride symbol in water chemistry; specifically, using the wrong capitalization in an element symbol..
- Leaving F⁻ unexplained in dental-science references when the audience may read it as NaF.
- Assuming the font used for laboratory reports will render fluoride symbol exactly like the preview on this page.
- Converting F⁻ into an image even though selectable Unicode text is appropriate for fluoride symbol.
- Publishing fluoride symbol without checking the distinction from HF.
- Using F⁻ as the only accessible name of a button, diagram item, formula token, or status message.
Intent differentiation
Fluoride Symbol intent boundary
This page covers F⁻ as an ion formula. It is not elemental fluorine F₂, a temperature unit, or a hazard label by itself.
More About the Fluoride Symbol
The exact copyable form documented for Fluoride Symbol is F⁻, encoded as U+0046 U+207B (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F + SUPERSCRIPT MINUS). F⁻ is the chemical notation for the fluoride ion: the element symbol F with a single negative charge. Examples such as F⁻; NaF → Na⁺ + F⁻; Fluoride concentration: F⁻ place F⁻ in Chemical equations, Water chemistry, Dental-science references. Each Fluoride Symbol example can be reused to check the identity, spacing, and reading of F⁻ after paste. It is not elemental fluorine F₂, a temperature unit, or a hazard label by itself. The variant review compares F− — Plain minus form (Fluoride with a baseline minus); NaF — Sodium fluoride (Neutral ionic compound). These forms may be related by shape or topic, yet the destination text should preserve F⁻ when Fluoride Symbol is required. A visually similar result is not sufficient when the destination requires the exact form F⁻. Use the complete sequence rather than a screenshot or lookalike glyph. For input, the saved Windows method is: Copy F⁻ from this page or enter the complete sequence U+0046 U+207B in a Unicode-aware editor. The saved Mac method is: Open Character Viewer with Control+Command+Space and search for the first character name, or copy F⁻ from this page. On devices without a direct input method for Fluoride Symbol, paste the complete form F⁻ and verify U+0046 U+207B afterward. They do not make Fluoride Symbol a universal logo, legal sign, safety mark, or cultural claim beyond the scope stated on this page.
Continue exploring: Chloride Symbol Cl⁻ , Iodide Symbol I⁻ , Sodium Symbol Na and Ammonia Symbol NH₃ . You can also browse all symbols.
Fluoride Symbol FAQ
What is the encoded form of Fluoride Symbol?
Fluoride Symbol is stored as U+0046 U+207B, whose Unicode character names are LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F + SUPERSCRIPT MINUS.
How should I copy F⁻ for chemical equations?
Copy the complete sequence F⁻ and verify that all characters in U+0046 U+207B remain present after pasting.
Which HTML form reproduces Fluoride Symbol?
Use literal UTF-8 F⁻, decimal references F ⁻, or hexadecimal references F ⁻; do not substitute F−.
Why might F⁻ look different in water chemistry?
The font or emoji renderer can change shape and spacing, but the encoded sequence U+0046 U+207B should remain unchanged.
Can I replace F⁻ with NaF or HF?
Only when the destination convention explicitly calls for that form. This page covers F⁻ as an ion formula. It is not elemental fluorine F₂, a temperature unit, or a hazard label by itself.