As4-O10 Numbers are subscripts.
As4O2 i think
As4O10
As4O6
As4O6
The name of As4O10 would be tetraarsenic decoxide. It is not a real compound. The closest real compound is As2O5, which is arsenic pentoxide.
"oxide" has no formula. An oxide is just a compound (or atom) that has had its valence orbitals satisfied with oxygen molecules. There are a vast number of oxides, each with different formulas. ie. Iron (III) Oxide: Fe2O3 Potassium Oxide: K2O etc.
P4O10 - P for Phosphorous, 4 for tetra; O for oxygen, 10 for dec-.
Most chemical compound names are taken from what and how many atoms that they are made of. For instance, diphosphorus decoxide is di- (2) phosphorus dec- (10) oxide, or, P2O10.
This compound is called tetraarsenic pentasulfide.
The name of As4O10 would be tetraarsenic decoxide. It is not a real compound. The closest real compound is As2O5, which is arsenic pentoxide.
"oxide" has no formula. An oxide is just a compound (or atom) that has had its valence orbitals satisfied with oxygen molecules. There are a vast number of oxides, each with different formulas. ie. Iron (III) Oxide: Fe2O3 Potassium Oxide: K2O etc.
P4O10 - P for Phosphorous, 4 for tetra; O for oxygen, 10 for dec-.
Most chemical compound names are taken from what and how many atoms that they are made of. For instance, diphosphorus decoxide is di- (2) phosphorus dec- (10) oxide, or, P2O10.
This compound is called tetraarsenic pentasulfide.
P3O10 probable doesn't exist; P4O10 is the chemical formula of tetraphosphorus decaoxide (frequently writed as P2O5).
tetraphosphorus decoxide
Tetraphosphorus decoxide, also known as diphosphorous pentoxide, is a white powder a.f.a.i.k. and a very powerfull desiccant forming phosphoric aci.
The prefix deca- means 10, so there are 10 oxygen atoms in a molecules of tetraphosphorus decoxide. The formula is P4O10
tetraphosphorus decoxide
Tetraphosphorous decoxide would be the formal IUAPC name, though P2O5 is the empirical formulation called phosphorous pentoxide, however it is improper to reduce covalent bonds.
tetraphosphorus decaoxide looks correct BUT when a prefix ends in "a" or "o" and the anion name begins with a vowel, the "a" or "o" on the prefix is dropped to avoid having two vowels together in the name. So the name is tetraphosphorus decoxide