Chromium (II) Carbonate. Although I'm not sure Chromium (II) can form, there might be an overall charge on your formula there...
copper (II) carbonate is a solid
Lead(II) carbonate is a white solid.
chromium (III) acetate at least this is what masteing chemistry told me after I guessed wrong three times I however am not to sure because my chem. teacher "doctor" Ott did not bother teaching me how to figure this out before she assigned it for homewor
Method:Chromium = Cr3+ + Carbonate = CO3 2-Cr3+ + CO32- = Cr2(CO3)3Note how and where the numbers and compounds are replaced.Sorry I can not explain in full but this is basically how its done.
Chromium (II) Carbonate. Although I'm not sure Chromium (II) can form, there might be an overall charge on your formula there...
Chromium (II) Carbonate. Although I'm not sure Chromium (II) can form, there might be an overall charge on your formula there...
copper (II) carbonate is a solid
Lead(II) carbonate is a white solid.
it is a white solid
The formula for the compounds: Chromium (VI) Phosphate; Vanadium (IV) Carbonate; Tin (II) Nitrite?
chromium (III) acetate at least this is what masteing chemistry told me after I guessed wrong three times I however am not to sure because my chem. teacher "doctor" Ott did not bother teaching me how to figure this out before she assigned it for homewor
Yes. Calcium carbonate has solubility of only 0.0013 g/100ml at 250C
H2Cr.CO3
Iron(II) carbonate [green] to Iron(II) oxide.
The natural state of the element chromium is a solid metal. The natural state just indicates what the element is.
Basic copper carbonate is prepared by combining aqueous.