Coefficient
coefficient
it's called a subscript
This number is the number of atoms of this element in the formula; and subscript meaning is down.
In a chemical Equation ,The reactants are on the left side of a chemical equation and the products are on the right side.The number in front of a chemical formula in a chemical equation is called atoms. They should be a balancing number on both the sides.
Chemical compounds (organic) placed in a homologous series have a general chemical formula. The common example is alkenes.
The formula is N2H4. You can easily figure this out on your own by recognizing what the prefixes on each element mean. For example, "di" means two and "tetra" means four. Then you just write the element's symbol (which is N for nitrogen and H for hydrogen) with the number that the prefix represents as a subscript.
subscript
it's called a subscript
This number is the number of atoms of this element in the formula; and subscript meaning is down.
it's a subscript
Coefficient. It generally corresponds to the number of moles of the molecule / atom under consideration.
In a chemical Equation ,The reactants are on the left side of a chemical equation and the products are on the right side.The number in front of a chemical formula in a chemical equation is called atoms. They should be a balancing number on both the sides.
Yes.
Atomic weight. It's always the bigger number.
Balancing a chemical equation can often require a whole-number coefficient placed in front of a chemical formula. This upholds the Law of Conservation of Matter, which says that matter cannot be created or destroyed. These coefficients must be in the lowest possible ratio.
Integers are placed in front of the formula or a chemical symbol for and element.
A coefficient is the number that goes before an element when your balancing the equation. And a subscript is the number after the element. Subscripts are not changed when you balance the equation.
YES how do you think we make formulas?