Only the compound UH3 is possible and known.
No, Uranium has far more electrons. In a neutral atom number of electrons=number of protons=atomic number. Hydrogen has 1 electron. Uranium has 92.
1. Uranium has 92 electrons and protons; also variable number of neutrons, depending on the isotope. The atomic weight is approx. 238. 2. Hydrogen (the isotope 1H) has 1 electron and 1 proton. The atomic weight is approx. 1.
The empirical formula of the compound is UF6 (uranium hexafluoride). This is because the ratio of uranium to fluorine in the compound is close to 1:6, indicating that there are six fluorine atoms for every one uranium atom in the compound.
Hydrogen = H2 Oxygen = O2 Nitrogen = N2
The answer is a 1:1 ratio! I hope this helped
One molecule of a compound of hydrogen and chlorine that is called hydrogen chloride and has the formula HCl.
H2O-2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom.
There are no atoms of HCl in one molecule of HCl, because HCl is not an atom. It is a molecule. HCl is made of two parts: hydrogen atoms, and chlorine atoms. Each molecule of HCl contains one hydrogen atom and one chlorine atom. H stands for hydrogen, and Cl stands for chlorine. Compare this to H2O, which is the chemical formula for water. Water has 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom.
The ratio of hydrogen to ammonia in the chemical formula of ammonia (NH3) is 3:1. This means that there are 3 atoms of hydrogen for every 1 atom of ammonia in the compound.
Compound. Chemical formula: CH4, meaning it's 1 carbon atom and 4 hydrogen atoms.
An example of a covalent compound formed between an element in period 2 and a halogen is hydrogen fluoride (HF). This compound is formed by the sharing of electrons between the hydrogen atom (period 1) and the fluorine atom (halogen).
There is 1 hydrogen atom and 1 chlorine atom in Hydrogen Chloride.