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.
Fluorine is molecular, but it is an element, not a compound.
No Hg, or mercury is an element, but it is not molecular.
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)
T. H. Pennington has written: 'Molecular virology' -- subject(s): Molecular biology, Molecular virology, Viruses
Hg is an element.