The formula* for potassium hydrogen carbonate is KHCO3.
*Compounds have formulas; only chemical elements have symbols.
The symbol equation for Potassium Carbonate is...K2CO3:)
Hydrogen carbonate is a compound, not an element, and it therefore has a formula, not a symbol: H2CO3.
Potassium bicarbonate.
HOCO2
Potassium hydrogen carbonate is soluble in water.
KHCO3 is called: Potassium hydrogen carbonate or Potassium bicarbonate. It may be a part of baking powder.It's Krypton Helium Calcium Ozone. Kind of 'non'sense chemically speaking.Krypton, symbol is KrHelium, symbol is HeCalcium, symbol is CaOzone, symbol is O3 is an element, not 'as such' in a compound!
The potassium hydrogen carbonate (KHCO3) is very soluble in water: 22,29 g KHCO3/100 mL water at 20 0C.
The chemical symbol for sodium carbonate is Na2CO3.
It's impossible to tell. "Potassium hydrogen" is clearly an error of some kind; it might be a somewhat confused attempt to write "potassium hydride," or it could be an omission error for something like "potassium hydrogen carbonate."
I believe it is Potassium Hydride. I believe it is Potassium Hydride.
Ca(HCO3)2
pasta, bread, potato The previous answer relates to carbohydrates not carbonates (as per the question). Three examples of carbonates include: - calcium carbonate (CaCO3) - sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) - potassium carbonate (K2CO3)