The ore is called "Bauxite".
The chemical formula for Aluminium Oxide is Al2O3
Note however, this is not the chemical formula for Bauxite.
Al4Cl The compound name is Aluminum Chloride. Al=3- Cl=1+ Chlorine has 7 valence electrons and gains one to become stable making it a positive one charged ion. Aluminum has 3 valence electrons and loses three to become stable making it negative three charged ion.
Aluminium phosphate is AlPO4.
Aluminium ore is called bauxite
The word 'Sapphire' is derived from 'Sapphirus', which is Latin for blue. The chemical formula of sapphire is aluminium oxide (Al 2 O3). So scientifically it can be called as aluminum oxide. read more about sapphires below
Gi sorry i m just a guess but i recently found out it was Aluminium Oxide. hope this helps! by the way, aluminum is bauxite, so, it needs to be extracted by a method called electrolysis.
Aluminum cyanide is a chemical compound also called Al(CN)3.
Aluminum chloride is the name of the compound with the formula AlCl3. It is mainly produced and consumed in the production of aluminum, but it is also used in other areas of the chemical industry.
There is no such compound as BaBr3, there is BaBr2, barium bromide.
Al4Cl The compound name is Aluminum Chloride. Al=3- Cl=1+ Chlorine has 7 valence electrons and gains one to become stable making it a positive one charged ion. Aluminum has 3 valence electrons and loses three to become stable making it negative three charged ion.
Simply, this is aluminium sulfite. More formally it is aluminium(III) sulphate(IV).
Aluminium phosphate is AlPO4.
Aluminium ore is called bauxite
Sodium aluminium sulfate is a double salt often called soda alum. It is NaAl(SO4)2·12H2O
The word 'Sapphire' is derived from 'Sapphirus', which is Latin for blue. The chemical formula of sapphire is aluminium oxide (Al 2 O3). So scientifically it can be called as aluminum oxide. read more about sapphires below
Gi sorry i m just a guess but i recently found out it was Aluminium Oxide. hope this helps! by the way, aluminum is bauxite, so, it needs to be extracted by a method called electrolysis.
That's about as scientific as it gets. The compound is also called "alumina", but that's not really its "scientific name".
Aluminum is abundant in the earth's crust, however it does not occur by itself in nature. All of the aluminum in nature is found combined with another element or compound.