That would depend on what that compound is/is made from.
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Compounds have formulas that consist of symbols for elements and ions that are included in the molecules of the compound.The symbols (letters) are those of elements. These can be found on the periodic table. For example, H is hydrogen, He is helium and so on.
Compounds do not have symbols. Elements have symbols. Compounds have formulas (Latin formulae) that consist of a number of symbols for elements and ions.Some examples:Water - H2O (hydrogen and oxygen)Hydrochloric acid - HCl (hydrogen and chlorine)Table salt - NaCl (sodium and chlorine)Bleach/sodium hypochlorite - NaClO (sodium, chlorine, and oxygen)
IUPAC (International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry) has rules for writing chemical symbols and formulas. They are valid in all languages.For compounds search in a library Nomenclature of inorganic compounds and Nomenclature of organic compounds, with the text adapted to your language, if necessary.See the links below.
The term is formula : the combination of symbols for elements and ions that make up a compound.
Compounds can be described using element symbols and numbers
The chemical symbols of a highlighter typically include compounds like C(NH2)3, CH3COOC2H5, and C4H4N2. These compounds are commonly found in the fluorescent ink used in highlighters to create bright colors.
Respectively they represent elements and compounds.
Compounds are one or more elements combined to make a compound. Like H2o is oxygen and hydrogen combined.
The formulas of compounds contain as many unique symbols as the number of elements they contain. Sodium hypochlorite (bleach) has the formula NaClO which means that it contains the three elements sodium (Na), chlorine (Cl) and oxygen (O).
That would depend on what that compound is/is made from.
The correct symbols are:≠, >, ≥, or even