Ba2O3 is not a correct formula. The formula should be BaO which is barium oxide. BaO2 is barium peroxide.
BaCl2.2H2O is the correct formula for barium chloride dihydrate.
No. It's Fe2O3 or FeO depending on whether you're dealing with iron III or iron II oxide.
Nope. It is barium peroxide.
BaO is barium oxide.
no
The correct formula for iron(ll) bromide is FeBr2.
One example is carbon dioxide with the formula CO2.
Although Excel checks that the formula has the correct structure, it does not check that the formula contains the correct values or cell references.
Al N is the correct formula when aluminum and nitrogen are combined together.
SO3 is the chemical formula for sulfur trioxide.
The percentage of water is 14,75 %.
The correct formula for gallium oxide is Ga2O3.
The correct formula for iron(ll) bromide is FeBr2.
One example is carbon dioxide with the formula CO2.
Yes. It depends on the formula and what you want the formula to do. So it is easy to have the wrong formula and paste it, or have the correct formula initially, but when it is pasted elsewhere it does not use the correct values. Normally if you have your worksheet set up correctly then once the initial formula is correct, pasting it to the right place should not cause any problems.
Formula: Hg3N2
This formula is MgO.
Mg2C3 is the correct formula.
Square feet don't fit in the correct formula for shoes.
Although Excel checks that the formula has the correct structure, it does not check that the formula contains the correct values or cell references.
AlCl3 is the correct formula as the valency of aluminium and chlorine are 3 and 1 respectively.
The chemical formula (more correct is formula unit) of sodium chloride is NaCl.