In the compound dichloride there would be two chlorine atoms. This is because the compound dichloride is a binary covalent compound and these compound always follow the prefixs such as di, tri, mono, etc.
Di would be two, tetra would be four, and deca would be ten.
Di would be two, tetra would be four, and deca would be ten.
There would be four chlorine atoms as the prefix "tetra-" means 4.
Ten chlorine atoms are in decachloride.
2
4
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Silicon tetrachloride is the name of the compound SiCl4.
negatively
The prefix di- means two. However, you would wouldn't say Cl2 is dichloride--it is just chlorine. The only time you would use dichloride would be when it is in a compound with another non-metal such as Disulfur dichloride (S2Cl2).
negatively
C = 12 grams/mole Cl = 35.45 grams/mole CCl4 = 12 + (35.45)x4 = 153.8 grams/mole 153.8 grams/mole / 6.022 x 1023 things/mole = 25.4 x 10-23 grams/thing where thing in this case would be a molecule of CCl4
Tetra stands for four. So there are four chlorine atoms in a tetrachloride.
Four. That is the meaning of the prefix "tetra".
No. Silicon tetrachloride is a molecular compound.
3
5, one carbon & four chlorine. The prefix tetra- means four, and thus there are four chlorine atoms in a molecule of carbon tetrachloride.
Deca stands for 10. So there are ten chlorine atoms is decachloride.
Silicon tetrachloride is the name of the compound SiCl4.
SCl_4_ (the bounding underscores are to denote the subscript 4). The prefix on the chloride in the name denotes 4 Cl. Since this involves 2 (two) non-metals, you must specify how many of each element are in the compound to resolve the ambiguity. This is largely due to the fact that this is not an ionic compound where you can derive the charges and match up the elements accordingly. This is probable more than one may have been asking for. However, it is good to have.
The formula would be AlCl3, which is aluminum chloride.
In the compound dichloride there would be two chlorine atoms. This is because the compound dichloride is a binary covalent compound and these compound always follow the prefixs such as di, tri, mono, etc.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
Carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) has 4 chloride atoms.