Examples:
Oxides: uranium dioxide, uranium trioxide, uranium octaoxide
Salts: ammonium diuranate, uranyl nitrate, uranyl acetate, uranium hehxafluoride, uranium chloride
and many others because uranium is a reactive metal.
1. Uranium contain atoms, not molecules. 2. Many chemical compounds contain in the molecule uranium: uranium dioxide, uranium tetrafluoride, uranyl nitrate, etc.
Uranium is a metal, natural, radioactive. Uranium exist only as minerals in the nature. Soils contain traces of uranium.
I think you're missing an exponent on the number of molecules. Otherwise, it's just a 2-step conversion: molecules to moles, then moles to mass, based on the compound's molar mass of 352g/mol.
practically everything on earth contains some uranium
Aluminium nitrate - Al(NO3)2 - is a molecule and this compound contain molecules.
1. Uranium contain atoms, not molecules. 2. Many chemical compounds contain in the molecule uranium: uranium dioxide, uranium tetrafluoride, uranyl nitrate, etc.
Uranium (as an element) has atoms, not molecules; uranium compounds are molecules.
1. Yes, all coals contain traces of uranium. 2. Uranium is not combustible; the "burning" of uranium in nuclear reactors is a nuclear reaction, not a reaction with oxygen.
Uranium is a chemical element and doesn't contain other elements,As all chemical elements uranium is formed from protons, neutrons and electrons.
2
Uranium and thorium minerals contain radon.
No
None. A pellet of uranium contains uranium, not coal.
Uranium is a metal, natural, radioactive. Uranium exist only as minerals in the nature. Soils contain traces of uranium.
The uranium oxide U3O8 contain 84,8 % uranium.
Uranium 233 is an artificial isotope of uranium; 92 protons and electrons, 141 neutrons.
Coal dont't use uranium ! But coal ashes contain traces of uranium.