HgOH would be called mercury(I) hydroxide or mercurous hydroxide. This is a compound that is not well characterised, in other words it is reported by chemists but (as far as I know) the existence of the solid compound has not been proven- e.g. by x-ray crystallography. Some authors say it only exists in solution. It would contain the diatomic Hg22+ ion and the formula would be written Hg2(OH)2.
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The name of the compound CH4 is methane.
I think KCI ionic compound name is Potassium Chloride.
The systematic name of this compound is Gold(III) Phosphate.
HgOH would be called mercury(I) hydroxide or mercurous hydroxide. This is a compound that is not well characterised, in other words it is reported by chemists but (as far as I know) the existence of the solid compound has not been proven- e.g. by x-ray crystallography. Some authors say it only exists in solution. It would contain the diatomic Hg22+ ion and the formula would be written Hg2(OH)2.
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The formula is HgOH because Mercury is a transition metal and has an unknown charge until paired with hydroxide which has a -1 charge so they would combine equally to make HgOH
the compound name is atoms.
The name of this compound is iodine heptafluoride.
Tetranitrogen tetraselenide is the name of the compound.
The name of the compound CH4 is methane.
The name of the compound H2C2O4 is oxalic acid.
carya tomentosa the name for a compound leaf
If you mean CdI2 , then the name of the compound is Cadmium Iodide.
The name for the ionic compound CaSO4 is calcium sulfate.