Most chemical compound names are taken from what and how many atoms that they are made of. For instance, diphosphorus decoxide is di- (2) phosphorus dec- (10) oxide, or, P2O10.
The chemical formula for diphosphorus is P2
This compound probable doesn't exist.
Formula : P2
P2o6
The foumula for diphosphorus dioxide is P2 O2 by Calpio
The prefix di- means 2, and the prefix tetra- means 4, so the formula for diphosphorus tetrabromide is P2Br4.
P4O10 - P for Phosphorous, 4 for tetra; O for oxygen, 10 for dec-.
Triphosphorus Pentanitrite
The correct name is dimanganese pentasulfide.
The formula of diphosphorus textroxide is P2O4.
The foumula for diphosphorus dioxide is P2 O2 by Calpio
The prefix di- means 2, and the prefix tetra- means 4, so the formula for diphosphorus tetrabromide is P2Br4.
The chemical formula for diphosphorous pentaoxide is P2O5.
P4O10 - P for Phosphorous, 4 for tetra; O for oxygen, 10 for dec-.
Triphosphorus Pentanitrite
The correct name is dimanganese pentasulfide.
The formula for dinitrogen pentaphosphide is N2P5
The allotrope diphosphorus is P2.
"oxide" has no formula. An oxide is just a compound (or atom) that has had its valence orbitals satisfied with oxygen molecules. There are a vast number of oxides, each with different formulas. ie. Iron (III) Oxide: Fe2O3 Potassium Oxide: K2O etc.
P2I4 is the chemical formula of diphosphorus tetraiodide (or after IUPAC rules: tetraiododiphosphane).
P3O10 probable doesn't exist; P4O10 is the chemical formula of tetraphosphorus decaoxide (frequently writed as P2O5).