Phosphorus has many allotropes the most important ones are white and red . Whieis used bu military against troopes but it isn't allowed no more to the dramatic injuries it causes .As an example the war against Lebanon 2006 when isreel had used it and killed alot of troops or the Gaza war .While the red phosphorous is far more stable, does not react with air, and is essentially nontoxic.
The best known allotropes are
Additionally there are:-
The two most common allotropes of phosphorus are white phosphorus and red phosphorus.
Other allotropes are scarlet phosphorus, black phosphorus and diphosphorus.
phosphorus
Phosphorus has six allotropes.
This may mean phosphorus which has a number of allotropes some of which are based on their colour White phosphorus - P4 red phosphorus - amorphous and three crystalline forms all polymeric in nature black phosphorus - three forms are known - again polymeric violet phosphorus (aqlso called Hittorfs phosphorus) As you can see some of the coloured forms exist in different crystalline forms and therefore colour alone is not a good indication of which allotrope is meant. The wikipedia artcle is inaccurate- if you can access Greenwood and Earnshaw "Chemistry of the e lements" that has a good write up.
P is the chemical symbol for phosphorus. But you are correct in believing that the two most comman allotropes of phosphorus (red and white phosphorus) exist as P4. a tetrahedral arrangement of 4 phosphorus atoms. Another alloptrope is P2- Diphosphorus, which is highly reactive.
no, phosphorus is an element The image shows four allotropes of phosphorus. All the same pure element, but different interatomic bond patterns. These are physical changes.
phosphorus
Yes, P4 and P8 (also P12) are all allotropes.
Phophorus, whose allotropes are red phosphorus, white phosphorus , black phosphorus, violet phosphorus
Phosphorus has six allotropes.
Phosphorus
Phosphorus has a number of different allotropes each with different densities. These allotropes are (white) 1.823, (red) ≈ 2.2 -- 2.34, (violet) 2.36, (black) 2.69 g·cm−3 Phosphorus has a atomic mass of 30.97376.
Phosphorus is an element. Phosphorus has many allotropes the most important ones are white and red .
Phosphorus is solid at room temperature. That said, phosphorus is an element that can take different solid forms, depending upon how it was prepared and other factors. These different forms are called "allotropes".So a room temperature sample of phosphorus could be the common red phosphorus, used to make matches and road flares; the poisonous waxy white phosphorus, which is used to make incendiary bombs; or the rare purple/black phosphorus. You can see pictures of all three allotropes by googling "phosphorus".
Both allotropes of Phosphorus are non metals.
Yes, white phosphorus is phosphorus. Phosphorus has several allotropes: white, red, violet, scarlet, black, and diphosphorus. While all are the same pure chemical the inter-atomic bonds are different, some allotropes are crystalline others amorphous, and chemical properties vary.white is poison and can ignite spontaneously.red is non-toxic and harder to ignite.etc.
Phosphorus is a solid. There are various forms, allotropes of phosphorus:-White phosphorus consisting of P4 molecules - most familiar formRed phosphorus with chain structureViolet phosphorus with a complex layer structureBlack phosphorus a metallic looking substance with a layer structure
This may mean phosphorus which has a number of allotropes some of which are based on their colour White phosphorus - P4 red phosphorus - amorphous and three crystalline forms all polymeric in nature black phosphorus - three forms are known - again polymeric violet phosphorus (aqlso called Hittorfs phosphorus) As you can see some of the coloured forms exist in different crystalline forms and therefore colour alone is not a good indication of which allotrope is meant. The wikipedia artcle is inaccurate- if you can access Greenwood and Earnshaw "Chemistry of the e lements" that has a good write up.