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CH(Cl3) - carbon plus hydrogen plus chlorine. In other words, a chloroform molecule is a single carbon atom with one hydrogen atom and three chlorine atoms attached to it.
Chlorine.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine. The Chloroform molecule is CHCl3 . Its modern IUPAC name is 'Trichloromethane'.
Yes. All bonds in chloroform are covalent.
chloroform
CH(Cl3) - carbon plus hydrogen plus chlorine. In other words, a chloroform molecule is a single carbon atom with one hydrogen atom and three chlorine atoms attached to it.
Chlorine.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine. The Chloroform molecule is CHCl3 . Its modern IUPAC name is 'Trichloromethane'.
Yes. All bonds in chloroform are covalent.
That is the correct spelling of the word "chemical" (concerning an element or substance's properties).
chloroform
There is no correct chemical formula described in your question. When calcium and chlorine combine, they form calcium chloride with a formula of CaCl2.
The chemical formula of zinc chloride is ZnCl2.
Yes it is that kind of. Chlorine is the halogen.
3/5ths
Chloroform is non-flammable in some datas or somethin. I tested some choloroform with fire and it exploded with fire. The reason why chloroform is "Non-Flammable" is because Chloroform don't actually "BURN" when it is being heated by fire. The reason why chloroform "Burn and explode" is because when the fire (Heat) touches chloroform the chloroform will "Decompose" and librates Chlorine, Phosgene and HYDROGEN. The Hydrogen gas will causes fire and heat while the chlorine "explode".
One zinc atom = Zn Two chlorine atoms = Cl2 Chemical formula for zinc choride compound = ZnCl2