What is the systematic name of D-arabinose
Systematic name is a name given in a systematic way to one unique group, organism, object or chemical substance, out of a specific population or collection.Systematic names are usually part of a nomenclature.
Halothane is the systematic name. It has no other name and there would be no point giving a chemical name as it would cause an extortionate amount of confusion in the chemical world of chemists.
Methane
Carbon4oxide
Mercury(II) bromide
Mercury (II) Bromide
HgBr2 is mercury II bromide or mercuric bromide.
HgBr2
Take the FW weight of the HgBr2-360.398g/moldivide it by the atomic weight of Mercury=200.59g/mol1g Hg in relation to FW of HgBr2 = 360.398/200.59 = 1.7966898gTo make 1000ppm of Hg, dissolve 1.79669g of HgBr2 in 1000ml of waterGet in touch if you are stuckIsaac Kiplagat
Take the FW weight of the HgBr2-360.398g/moldivide it by the atomic weight of Mercury=200.59g/mol1g Hg in relation to FW of HgBr2 = 360.398/200.59 = 1.7966898gTo make 1000ppm of Hg, dissolve 1.79669g of HgBr2 in 1000ml of waterGet in touch if you are stuckIsaac Kiplagat
HgBr2
It is HgBr2.
What is the systematic name of D-arabinose
mercury bromide
Ethane is the accepted IUPAC name for CH3CH3.
Systematic name is a name given in a systematic way to one unique group, organism, object or chemical substance, out of a specific population or collection.Systematic names are usually part of a nomenclature.