This compound is copper(II) hydroxide.
OH2 is a very nonstandard way to write H2O, which is water. (When I was a high school student, a fad - which, fortunately, was short-lived - was to write it as "HOH" to show one of two things - that it was a hydrogen bonded to a hydroxy group and to show the order the atoms lined up in the compound. Thank Buddha we don't try to show atomic alignment in all compounds...imagine notating bromophenol blue dye - C19H10BR4O5S - that way. This thing has three aromatic rings held together with another carbon atom...a very ugly molecule to write a Lewis diagram for, but the 3D model of it is most satisfying...)
A common way to write chemical compounds is the Hill System, which was created by Edwin A. Hill of the US Patent and Trademark Office in 1900. It's most used for notating organic compounds, because it calls for the carbon atoms to be listed first, then the hydrogens and then all the other elements in the compound, in alphabetical order. Under Hill System, water is notated H2O because H comes before O in the alphabet.
Another popular way is to notate by electronegativity - an atom's tendency to attract electrons to itself. In this system, the least electronegative element is listed first...so, sulfuric acid is H2SO4 and not H2O4S:
H = 2.20 electronegativity
S = 2.58
O = 3.44
The hydroxy group is special: it's notated "backwards" (according to either Hill or electronegativity it should be HO) because of bonding. The hydroxy group has to bond to something like...oh, an ethane molecule to form ethanol or a sodium atom to form sodium hydroxide. The group is going to bond into the molecule through the oxygen atom rather than the hydrogen atom, so they write it "OH" to make that more clear.
OH- is also commonly referred to as the Hydroxide Ion.
OH is hydroxide, consisting of one atom of hydrogen and one of oxygen.
HOH, more commonly written H2O is the formula for dihydrogen monoxide, also known as water.
There is no such substance as 'OH' . However, there is an anion(ion) ' OH^-' .
Notie it has a negative charge, which MUST be shown.
Hydroxide.
OH
Water.
Calcium Hydroxide has a molecular formula of Ca(OH)2. The structural formula is H-O-Ca-O-H.
The chemical symbol is the symbol that stands for the name of an element. Some common chemical symbols are Na (sodium), H (hydrogen), Au (gold), Hg (mercury), etc...
OH is not an element. It consists of two separate elements: hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O).
H+(aq)+ Br-(aq) +Na+(aq) + OH-(aq)----->H+(l)+OH-(l) +Br-(S) +Na+(S)By cancelling out the spectator ions we are left with...H+(aq) + OH-(aq) ------> H(l)+ + OH(l)-
The equation is:H+ + (NO3)- + Na+ + (OH)- = (NO3)- + Na+ + H2O (2 H+ OH-)
HO-CH2-C(H+OH)-C(OH+H)-C(H+OH)-C(H+OH)-CH2-OH. This molecule has two names - D-Glucitol and L-Sorbitol.
H-O- or just -OH
An enantiomer is a pair of structures which are mirror images of each other. For D-glucose:CHO | CHO| | |H--OH | OH--H| | |OH--H | H--OH| | |H--OH | OH--H| | |H--OH | OH--H| | |CH2OH | CH2OHOn the left is D-glucose, and on the right is L-glucose, mirror images.
Propanol (1-propanol) is the chemical name for the molecular formula of C3H8O. The structure of 1-propanol is: H C C I I IH-C-C -C-OH I I I H H H
H+ + OH- = hydro-genesis.
This is the water molecule.
Alcohol itself is not an element so it has no single symbol. The characteristic of an alcohol is OH, i.e. oxygen (O) combined with hydrogen (H), so every molecule with a OH part in it you call an alcohol. E.g. ethanol the most common alcohol is ethane with instead of a H a OH part.There are many chemical forms of alcohol, but the most common which is used in drinks is ethyl alcohol C2H5OH.Methylated spirits is ethyl alcohol to which a small percentage of methyl alcohol (CH3OH) is added to poison it to discourage its consumption.
CH3CH2CH2CH20H H H H OH | | | | H-C-C-C-C-H | | | | H H H H molecular formula is C4H10O
H2O is the chemical formula of water.
Calcium Hydroxide has a molecular formula of Ca(OH)2. The structural formula is H-O-Ca-O-H.
The chemical symbol is the symbol that stands for the name of an element. Some common chemical symbols are Na (sodium), H (hydrogen), Au (gold), Hg (mercury), etc...
This molecule is water, H2O.