[…]but that 02 is two oxygen’s but why is one called Oxide and the other one dioxide”
The, quote-unquote, proper name for the compound MnO2 is “Manganese (IV) Oxide. Sometimes you will also see it called “Manganese Dioxide” by people using it outside what might normally be considered a chemistry situation (for example, a Pottery supply house).
The “Di” is not technically part of the name since the number of Oxygen atoms in the compound is more or less implied when you know the charge on the Manganese ion (+4). Since Oxide ions have a -2 charge, you should be able to figure out that there will be 2, -2, Oxides for every Mn+4.
For SiO2 (since it is not an ionic compound, but rather a molecule), we do need to specify the “Di” on the Oxide to indicate the number of Oxygens.
Other common molecules which you should know which specify the number of Oxygens are “Carbon Dioxide” (CO2) and “Carbon Monoxide” (CO).
I have lost all manner of ability to explain it I fear since I no longer think in terms of the ‘rules’ for naming the compounds.
I am not entirely sure, but I would guess the outside of the little EMF producing cells. As is my understanding, they have a type of cells which act as a little battery. Many of these ‘battery’ cells are stacked on top of each other to produce a high enough potential to perform its task of stunning the prey.
How does potassium and sodium acts as an electrolyte in a human body, it creates the electricity in the human’s body?
They do not “create” ‘electricity’.
If something is an electrolyte, it means that when it is dissolved in water, it breaks into ions.
For example, Potassium Chloride (KCl), when dissolved in water will break up into K+ and Cl- ions.
If something is a strong electrolyte, it will break up [almost] completely into ions (whereas a weak electrolyte will hardly break up at all). Potassium and Sodium Chlorate are two examples of strong electrolytes.
Ordinarily, water will not conduct electricity since there are no available charge carries to transmit the current (electrical current is the flow of charged particles). When an electrolyte is dissolved in the water (which out body is made up 70% of), an electrical current is allowed to flow due to the presence of all these charges particles floating around in the water.
but why can't humans totally not breath “chlorine and fluorine” gasses but only oxygen? But all of them are oxidizers?
I would imagine that there are more requirements other than the gas we breathe in just being an oxidizer.
Chlorine and Fluorine react in a particularly negative way with the insides of our lungs, whereas Oxygen reacts in a rather ‘nice’ way. Why this is so might be venturing over into biology and how breathing has developed over time.