The IUPAC, (International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry), almost certainly have agreed on rules for describing by name a novel chemical compound.
This is quite a separate issue from trade names and trademarks.
The IUPAC, (International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry), almost certainly have agreed on rules for describing by name a novel chemical compound.
This is quite a separate issue from trade names and trademarks.
Compounds involving metals and non-metals are called ionic compounds.
If two non-metals react and form chemical bonds to one another, then the resulting compound would be termed covalent.
Carbon mono/di-oxide, sulfur di/tri-oxide, sulfur dichloride, disulfur dichloride,
and last but not least:
WATERA non metal and non metal would be a covalent (or molecular) bond.
hcl= chlorine
Ionic Bond
hjsxsh
ionic = metal + nonmetal covalent = nonmetal + nonmetal So your compound is covalent because P (Phosphorus) is a nonmetal and O (oxygen) is a nonmetal.
A covalent compound
When a nonmetal bonds with a nonmetal, it forms a covalent compound. One common example of these compounds is glucose.
Yes, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is a compound of a nonmetal and a nonmetal; therefore, it is covalently (molecular) bonded.
Chlorine is a nonmetal but its is an element, not a compound.
ionic = metal + nonmetal covalent = nonmetal + nonmetal So your compound is covalent because P (Phosphorus) is a nonmetal and O (oxygen) is a nonmetal.
metal
A covalent compound
When a nonmetal bonds with a nonmetal, it forms a covalent compound. One common example of these compounds is glucose.
Al2 (SO3)3Aluminum Sulfate? I'm not sure.It is an Ionic Compound, so it is named by the name of the metal (aluminum) followed by the shortened name of the nonmetal. (sulfate)
A molecular compound.
Yes, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is a compound of a nonmetal and a nonmetal; therefore, it is covalently (molecular) bonded.
Salt is a compound of Sodium (Na) and of Chlorine (Cl), thus, it is a nonmetal because it is a compound of 2 nonmetals. Na is not a nonmetal it is a highly active metal. This can be easily googled.
Chlorine is a nonmetal but its is an element, not a compound.
The name of the nonmetal in a binary compound with ionic bonds is modified to end in -ide. In ionic compounds with more than one nonmetal, including oxygen, other modifications of the name are used.
SO3 is a compound and therefore is neither a metal nor a nonmetal, because these are types of chemical elements, not of compounds. This particular compound consists of two nonmetal elements, sulfur and oxygen.
Phosphorus P