Formula: CH3CH2(O2C-CO2)CH2CH3
Weight 6 gram NH4-O2C-CH3 and add this to 96 g H2O and you'll have 100 g of the desired 6% solution. Simple though?
Journal entries for Order to Cash LifecycleOrder Management There are no accounting entries generated in OMInventoryWhen you ship the GoodsDr Cost of Goods sold (picked up from the Item)Cr Inventory (picked up from Subinventory)ReceivablesWhen you run the Auto invoice Program and create an InvoiceDr ReceivablesCr RevenueWhen you Receive CashDr Cash/ Bank AccountCr Cash Clearing AccountWhen you receive the paymentDr Cash Clearing AccountCr Receivables A/c
The normal convention is to write the part of the molecule that is less electronegative first then the part that is more electronegative. This has the effect of writing the cation then the anion. For instance, carbon dioxide is written as CO2. Why not write it as O2C and call it dioxygen monocarbide? Once again, we write the less electronegative element first which is C in the example. That is the way to deal with all of the binary molecular compounds.