experimentation
total number of electrons
Flourine
nonmetals. Examples include H2O, CO, NH3, SO2.
There is no such thing as dialuminum trioxide because the combination of 2 aluminums and 3 oxygens creates an IONIC COMPOUND, since it is between a metal and nonmetal, and ionic compounds are not named the same way as binary molecular compounds which is the way it is named in the question. In naming a binary molecular compound you denote each element with the number of each atom in the formula, which was done with " dialuminum trioxide", except this molecule is NOT a binary molecular compound, but an IONIC COMPOUND. To name an ionic compound you simply drop the ending to the least metallic element (oxygen) and add an -ide. So the outcome is ALUMINUM OXIDE.
Iron (III) bromine, or FeBr3 is a binary ionic compound. Its ions are the metal Fe and the non-metal Br (the number of bromines per molecule doesn't influence the answer). A polyatomic ion is one which has one or more atoms of two or more elements, such as carbonate (CO3), hydroxide (OH), or nitrite (NO2), just to name a few.
No.Water is a binary compound. A binary compound contains two elements, regardless of the number of atoms of each.
No. The element's atomic number determines how it forms compounds.
total number of electrons
The number of atoms in each element .
A molecular formula is what determines the definite amount of atoms in a chemical compound. It gives the number and type of atoms in the compound.
The binary value of the decimal number 57 (fifty seven) is 00111001According to three different decimal to binary converters I tried, the decimal number 57 is expressed in binary as 111001. Being able to convert to binary is important because binary is what computers work in.
1110 0111 1100 00112 is not a binary number as it has three different symbols
With that big old '5' in there, this can't be a binary number. A binary number is written with only 2 symbols. They're usually represented as '0' and '1', but they can be any two different marks. The number in the question has 3 different marks.
Because different elements have different numbers of protons, which determines the atomic number.
The term binary is applied to a number of different things, such as binary stars, binary numbers, or binary chemical agents. Your question should be more specific.
No, the number of protons is what determines what element it is
Over 9000!