In 3Ca(OH)2 there are three Ca(OH)2 - (Calcium hydroxide) moleculesIn one Ca(OH)2 there is one Calcium, and two (OH) units.
In one (OH) unit there is one Oxygen and one Hydrogen.
With the above information it evident that there are 5 atoms in one Ca(OH)2 molecule and as there are 3 of these molecules present, there would be a total of 15 atoms present in 3Ca(OH)2
Calcium Hydroxide, or CaOH2, is a base. Generally compounds containing hydroxyl groups and metals will act as bases in reaction.
Three atoms are there In the 3co
15 Fe2O3 has 2 + 3 atoms = 5 atoms Multiply the whole thing by 3 and you end up with 15 atoms.
3 nitrogen atoms.
Limestone has 5 molecule atoms
Because the atoms would be in the wrong order.
3 atoms I think.
2 Sulfur atoms and 3 Oxygen atoms
Nope... it is not.
Calcium Hydroxide, or CaOH2, is a base. Generally compounds containing hydroxyl groups and metals will act as bases in reaction.
3 atoms
Three atoms are there In the 3co
3 nitrogen atoms.
In one mole of this solution, there are seven moles of H2O.
It's 3 molecules of water. A water molecule has 3 atoms. So there are 9 atoms in 3H2O
TiO2 has 3 atoms in total.
3 atoms NH3