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Nothing. CaCl2 is a valid formula.
Because you've gotten at least one of them wrong. The chemical formula of maltose is a multiple of its empirical formula, because that's kind of a requirement in the definition of "empirical formula."
The chemical formula for lime water is Ca(OH)2(aq) + CO2(g) --> CaCO3(s) + H2O(I). It is an insoluble suspension of calcium carbonate.
chemical formula
That is the chemical formula. SnCl4 is the chemical formula for tin(IV) chloride.
Nothing. CaCl2 is a valid formula.
Its just in the wrong order. It has to be CaI2.
So it is wrong equation .Symbols are very important
Because you've gotten at least one of them wrong. The chemical formula of maltose is a multiple of its empirical formula, because that's kind of a requirement in the definition of "empirical formula."
The chemical name for water is di-hydrogen monoxide, in line with the formula H2O.
The chemical formula for lime water is Ca(OH)2(aq) + CO2(g) --> CaCO3(s) + H2O(I). It is an insoluble suspension of calcium carbonate.
CuH2PO4 - this is wrong! The correct answer is: Cu(H2PO4)2
Energy has no chemical formula as it is not a chemical.
The chemical formula for aluminum chloride is ALCL3. The number 3 is written below the line as a subscript.
chemical formula
That is the chemical formula. SnCl4 is the chemical formula for tin(IV) chloride.
Copper sulfate, chemical formula CuSO4Sodium chloride, chemical formula NaClSodium chromate, chemical formula H2CrO4Mercury sulfide, chemical formula HgSCalcium carbonate,CaCO3