Sulfuric acid is H2SO4 so it has 7.
Sulphuric acid, H2SO4, has two atoms of H, hydrogen, one atom of S, sulfur and four atoms of O, oxygen. Total (2 + 1 + 4 =) seven
H2SO4 Two atoms of hydrogen. One atom of sulfur. Four atoms of oxygen.
Three. They are hydrogen, sulphur and oxygen. One molecule of sulphuric acid contains 2 hydrogen(H) atoms, 1 sulphur(S) atom, and 4 oxygen(O) atoms. The formula for sulphuric acid is 'H2SO4'.
There are many different concentrations of "concentrated sulphuric acid". It is possible to deduce the concentration of the sulphuric acid by titration.
In one molecule of H2SO4, sulphuric acid, there is one atom of sulphur
2H2SO does not represent any compound that I recall. The closest match for this that I do recall is Sulphuric Acid with a formula: H2SO4 The total number of atoms in Sulphuric acid is: Hydrogen [2] plus Sulphur [1] plus Oxygen [4] making a total of 7 atoms in all.
1 mole of Sulphuric acid has : 12.044 x 1023 atoms of Hydrogen 6.022 x 1023 atoms of Sulphur 24.088 x atoms of oxygen.
Cyanic acid contain four atoms.
We know from looking at the molecular formula that one mole of molecules of H2SO4 contains 2 moles of atoms of hydrogen, 1 mole of atoms of sulfur and 4 moles of atoms of oxygen.
The empirical formula for sulphuric acid is H2SO4 which would indicate 2 hydrogen atoms for each sulpher atom (and 4 oxygen atoms). So there are twice as many hydrogen atoms as sulpher atoms.
Sulphuric acid is an acid, so many substances react with it. It will be impractical to list down all the things that would react with sulphuric acid as there are enormously too many! Examples are metals, metal oxides and metal carbonates.
i always thought there were 14000