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CaC2 is Calcium Carbide. Ca2C does not exist.
This compound does not exist.
Ka does not exist, Kr is Krypton, K is Potassium, and Ca is Calcium.
I have done my best to research this answer and my best assumption is that the substance does not exist. What does exist is Ca(C2H3O2)2 and this would be the formula for calcium acetate. It can not be calcium carbide mixed with calcium hydroxide or other such moiety. Further contributions in the discussion area please.
A special name doesn't exist.
CaC2 is Calcium Carbide. Ca2C does not exist.
This compound does not exist.
Isotopes of elements exist. There are no isotopes for compounds and calcium chloride is a compound.
What makes you think it can't? The compound CaCO3 is a very common mineral.
- The compound NaC1 doesn't exist. - The compound NaCl (sodium chloride) contain sodium and chlorine.
Calcium in milk exists as divalent cations, which must be accompanied by enough anions to balance their electric charge. In that sense, calcium in milk is a compound, but calcium as a chemical element can also exist on its own in another environment.
an ionic bond
Ka does not exist, Kr is Krypton, K is Potassium, and Ca is Calcium.
The chemical formula of calcium hydrogen carbonate is Ca(HCO3)2; this compound (which contain calcium, carbon and hydrogen) exist only in water solution.
No: Calcium by itself is a metal, but calcium hydroxide is a compound, and compounds are never metals. Note, however, that mixtures of metals, usually called alloys, do exist and are metallic. These alloys are not compounds because they do not have fixed compositions that are the ratios of small whole numbers of atoms of each constituent.
Calcium bicarbonate, Ca(HCO3)2 , is called calcium bicarbonate.There is no common name for this compound, because it is not common.In fact, in nature there is no solid compound with this chemical composition. Nor has it seemed possible to create it artificially.It can exist in solution, perhaps in water. But then a molecule of it would be something else, not Ca(HCO3)2For more information, see Related links below.
I have done my best to research this answer and my best assumption is that the substance does not exist. What does exist is Ca(C2H3O2)2 and this would be the formula for calcium acetate. It can not be calcium carbide mixed with calcium hydroxide or other such moiety. Further contributions in the discussion area please.