what is the formula for dichloropropane
SO2
Ag2O
The name tells you the formula. Di- means 2, and tri- means 3, so the formula is S2O3.
The chemical formula of sulfur dioxide is SO2 (not mono and di in the same name !).
N2O5 ( di=2, penta=5)
A chemical formula is the number of atoms in a substance, and is the same as a molecular formula (provided the substance is a molecule - if not, it has no molecular formula). A structural formula shows how the atoms are linked, and there are different interpretations of this: eg C3H8O2 is the chemical formula of 1,2 propan di-ol, which is the same as the chemical formula of 1,1 propan di-ol the structural formula however is CH2OHCHOHCH3 for 1,2 propan di-ol and CH(OH)2CH2CH3 for 1,1 propan di-ol. A displayed formula shows all the bonds: ........H..OH...H.............O-H...H...H ........|....|.....|..................|....|.....| ....H-C.-.C.-.C.-.H.....H-O-C.-.C.-.C.-.H ........|....|.....|..................|....|.....| ....H-O...H....H.................H...H....H 1,2 propan di-ol........1,1 propan di-ol ---------------------------------- Some chemicals, such as table salt, have no molecule. Thus, they only have chemical formula but not molecular formula. The chemical formula of table salt is NaCl. There are other salts, such as Na2SO4, MgSO4, etc. (If you hear people saying "the salt molecule has the formula of NaCl...", believe me, they do not know what they are talking about.) Some compounds exist as molecules- discrete entities, such as water. This kind of compounds have molecular formula. Water's is H2O. Structural formula? Never heard of.
Formula: CO2
Mingkui Zhou has written: 'Xichang--Dian zhong Diqu di zhi gou zhao te zheng ji di shi yan hua =' -- subject(s): Geology, Geology, Structural, Structural Geology
CO2
SO2
C2O5 Just look at the latin roots (di, pent >> 2, 5)
CO2
The answer to this question is coded in the name of the compound itself: "di" means 2 and "octa" means 8. Therefore, the formula is Si2N8.
The formula is H2S. Di = 2, hydrogen = H, sulfide = S.
CsH2PO4
Ag2O
dinitrogen pentaoxide: This IS the formula name for the chemical formula N2O5, sometimes called nitrogen pentoxide (without 'di' and pent without 'a').From Latin: 'di' = two and 'penta' = five