Nitroglycerin is one molecule.
There are three different elements and a total of five atoms in nitric acid. The formula for nitric acid is HNO3. This means there is one atom of hydrogen, one atom of nitrogen, and three atoms of oxygen in one molecule of nitric acid.
Yes, Nitroglycerin (C3H5N3O9) has 3 nitrogen atoms in every molecule.
Nitroglycerin has polar bonds due to differences in electronegativity between nitrogen, oxygen, and carbon atoms. This leads to slight charges on the atoms, making it a polar molecule overall.
Nitroglycerin doesn't really have a plural, since it is a liquid.
How is Nitroglycerin related to fat?!?!?!?!
Nitroglycerin is a colorless to pale yellow liquid.
The opposite of nitroglycerin would be a substance that is stable and not explosive.
The molecular formula of nitroglycerin is C3H5N3O9. To form 1 mole of nitroglycerin, you would need 3 moles of glycerol (C3H8O3) as each mole of glycerol provides 3 moles of carbon atoms necessary for the nitroglycerin structure. The molar mass of glycerol is 92.09 g/mol, so to make 1 mole of nitroglycerin, you would need 276.27 grams of glycerol.
nitroglycerin
The scientific name for nitroglycerin is glyceryl trinitrate.
The chemical formula for nitroglycerin is C3H5N3O9. To calculate the number of moles of nitroglycerin, divide the given mass of nitroglycerin by its molar mass (227.09 g/mol). To find the number of molecules of nitroglycerin, multiply the number of moles by Avogadro's number (6.022 x 10^23 molecules/mol).
He invented nitroglycerin - explosives - kill people