i believe it represents the overall charge after the atom becomes an ion
There is one atom of that element in the molecule.
There is one atom of that element in the molecule.
In a formula, a subscript is a small number or letter written slightly below and to the right of a character. Subscripts are commonly used to indicate the number of atoms or ions in a chemical formula, the position of elements in a chemical reaction, or the index of summation in mathematics.
The subscript in a chemical formula represents the amount of that atom in that compound's formula.
I expect you mean, toluene, whose chemical formula is C7H8. Please see the link.
There is one atom of that element in the molecule.
usually a subscript denotes the number of atoms of a particular element within the formula. ie H2O (the 2 would be a subscript) indicates there are two atoms of hydrogen in one molecule of water.
There is one atom of that element in the molecule.
The meaning is that only one atom of this element exist in the molecule. Example: sodium chloride - NaCl.
There is one atom of that element in the molecule.
Yes. In the chemical formula H2O, the subscript 2 after the hydrogen means there are two hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water. The absence of a subscript after the oxygen means the subscript is understood to be 1, so there is one atom of oxygen in a water molecule.
In a formula, a subscript is a small number or letter written slightly below and to the right of a character. Subscripts are commonly used to indicate the number of atoms or ions in a chemical formula, the position of elements in a chemical reaction, or the index of summation in mathematics.
The subscript 2 in front of the chemical formula for silver nitrate (AgNO3) indicates that there are two moles of silver ions (Ag+) present in the compound for every one mole of nitrate ions (NO3-). It does not change the individual elements' charges or valencies, but simply indicates the ratio in which they are combined.
The subscript in a chemical formula represents the amount of that atom in that compound's formula.
fluorine is a diatomic halogen,found as F2 Answer: The formula of Fluorine is "F" and being highly reactive it exists as "F2".
I expect you mean, toluene, whose chemical formula is C7H8. Please see the link.
Well, tne chemical formula is MnO2. If you mean the name of it, that is manganese dioxide.