Tin carbonate is used for a number of things. It is commonly used to make metal alloys, making glass and soldering iron among others.
Tin carbonate is used as a pigment in ceramic glazes and as a polishing agent for glass and metals. It can also be used in the preparation of tin salts and as a precursor for other tin compounds.
Tin(IV) carbonate
SnCl2 + H2CO3
This question has not been answered properly. The previous answer has been removed on the grounds that it was not informative and insulting. Based on a alacritous search I have yet to find solid evidence that such a compound is possible.
Gallium carbonate has not uses outside a laboratory.
Sodium carbonate is not used in agriculture.
Tin(IV) carbonate
Tin carbonate - SnCO3
Sn (Tin) and C (Carbon) don't normally occur together. The closest reference I could find was to "Tin-Doped Carbon Clusters" in a chemistry journal.
Sn(CO3)2
SnCl2 + H2CO3
The formula for the compounds: Chromium (VI) Phosphate; Vanadium (IV) Carbonate; Tin (II) Nitrite?
Sn(IV)CO3
Tin can poisoning was from the lead (metal) that used to be used to seal tin cans. It is no longer used.
This question has not been answered properly. The previous answer has been removed on the grounds that it was not informative and insulting. Based on a alacritous search I have yet to find solid evidence that such a compound is possible.
Sodium carbonate is not used in agriculture.
Gallium carbonate has not uses outside a laboratory.
It is physically made up of these elements Tin(II), Carbon and Oxygen+3. The specific name is Sulfur Carbonate