The chemical formula of sulfur dioxide is SO2 (not mono and di in the same name !).
Formula: K3PO4
When you have two nonmetals bounded together, you form a covalent bond. When the covalently-bonded molecule consists of two atoms of different elements, you give the second atom the prefix "mono-", so you should have "sulfur monoxide" instead.
The substance Cl2O is known as dichlorine monoxide. This name is derived from the formula; chlorine has the prefix "di" because there are two chlorine elements and oxide has the prefix "mono" because there is one oxygen atom.
NO is nitrogen monoxide . NB It is NOT Mono Oxide. it is a combined word 'Monoxide'.
No. Prefixes designating quantity are only ever used for other elements in the compound, never the first one. Example: Carbon Monoxide. The chemical formula is CO, and there is one Carbon atom, just as there is one Oxygen atom, but the Mono- prefix is only affixed to the Oxygen. It should be noted, however, that such prefixes are not always used in chemical formulas. MgCl2 is not named Magnesium Dichloride, just Magnesium Chloride.
C13h9o11
HF
Iodine minus: I-
Carbon dioxide is CO2. There is no such chemical as carbon mono dioxide, but carbon monoxide is CO.
Formula: K3PO4
When you have two nonmetals bounded together, you form a covalent bond. When the covalently-bonded molecule consists of two atoms of different elements, you give the second atom the prefix "mono-", so you should have "sulfur monoxide" instead.
the cl is the part of freely gasses
Sulfur can form many strange allotropes; see the link below.
The substance Cl2O is known as dichlorine monoxide. This name is derived from the formula; chlorine has the prefix "di" because there are two chlorine elements and oxide has the prefix "mono" because there is one oxygen atom.
(mono)vanadium dioxide. The "mono" part of the name is optional and is usually omitted in names of compounds of elements readily recognized as metals that contain only one metal atom per formula unit.
Because stoechiometrically 1 S is connected to 1 Cl, resulting in S2Cl2
Because: 1. Carbon monoxide (CO) has one atom of oxygen in the molecule. 2. Carbon dioxide (CO2) has two atoms of oxygen in the molecule. CO and CO2 are different chemical compounds.