Hydrogen, in its elemental form, forms diatomic molecules, H2 , so it can be considered molecular.
H (hydrogen) exits as diatomic molecules
Technically no, molecular formula tells you how many atoms of each element compose a molecule. For example O: oxygen C: Carbon H: hydrogen Carbon dioxides molecular formula is CO2 Atmospheric oxygen is O2 Glucose's molecular formula is C6H12O6
oxygen is an element not a molecular compound as a molecular compounds are chemically combined and are of more then one element.
yes
No Hg, or Mercury is an element, but it is not molecular.
No. It's a molecular element.
A molecular formula indicates the numbers of atoms of each element in the molecule, but a structural formula also indicates the arrangement of the atoms in the molecule. For example, H2O is the molecular formula for water, but H-O-H is the structural formula, showing how the hydrogen and oxygen atoms are arranged in the molecule.
Symbols are used when showing the molecular structure of a substance, for example the molecular structure of water is H2O meaning that it has 2 hydrogen atoms (H) and 1 oxygen atoms (O)
Fluorine is molecular, but it is an element, not a compound.
No Hg, or mercury is an element, but it is not molecular.
T. H. Pennington has written: 'Molecular virology' -- subject(s): Molecular biology, Molecular virology, Viruses
There are two elements in water. Hydrogen (H), and Oxygen (O). It is made up of two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen, therefore its molecular structure is written 'H2O'.