Tin sulfate is made out of the elements tin, sulfur and oxygen. The mass numbers of tin, oxygen and sulfur are 117, 16 and 32 respectively. Therefore the molecular weight of the empirical formula is 215 g/mol.
The chemical formula for tin(II) sulfate is SnSO4.
Two sulfates are known: SnSO4 and Sn(SO4)2.
The chemical formula for tin(IV) sulfate is Sn(SO4)2. This compound is made up of one tin atom and two sulfate ions.
The formula for stannic sulfate is Sn(SO4)2, where Sn represents the element tin and SO4 represents the sulfate group. The compound is made up of one tin atom bonded to two sulfate ions.
The formula for iron (II) sulfate is FeSO4.H2O, and its gram formula unit mass is 169.92. Therefore, 3.52 formula units of this compound have a mass of 598 grams, to the justified number of significant digits.
The chemical formula for tin(II) sulfate is SnSO4.
Two sulfates are known: SnSO4 and Sn(SO4)2.
The chemical formula for tin(IV) sulfate is Sn(SO4)2. This compound is made up of one tin atom and two sulfate ions.
The formula for stannic sulfate is Sn(SO4)2, where Sn represents the element tin and SO4 represents the sulfate group. The compound is made up of one tin atom bonded to two sulfate ions.
There is no atomic mass - sulfate is a polyatomic ion. The molecular mass, however, is 80.1 g/mole.
The formula for iron (II) sulfate is FeSO4.H2O, and its gram formula unit mass is 169.92. Therefore, 3.52 formula units of this compound have a mass of 598 grams, to the justified number of significant digits.
The gram formula mass of anhydrous sodium sulfate is 142.04. Therefore, 43 gram formula units* of it has a mass of 43(142.04)6.1 X 103 grams, to the justified number of significant digits. _____________________________ For ionic compounds such as sodium sulfate, the term "formula unit" is preferred to "mole".
The anhydrous copper sulfate (CuSO4) has a molar mass of 159,62.
The molar mass of iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate is 278,01556.
Copper sulfate has CuSO4 as its formula. Copper sulfate is also written copper (II) sulfate.
*Tin Sulfate* NO! This is WRONG!SnS2 is Tin(IV) Sulfide, not Tin SulfateThe (IV) means that Tin has a 4+ charge (can be Tin(II) with a 2+ charge or Tin(IV))Sulfur has a 2- charge, so it takes 2 Sulfur ions to balance out the chargesso you have 1 Tin Ion with a charge of 4+ and 2 Sulfur Ions with charges of 2+put them together and it makes SnS2Sulfate is a polyatomic ion with the formula SO4 with a 2- charge, so the formula for Tin Sulfate would be Sn(SO4)2
Tin(II) sulfate is an inorganic compound. It is composed of tin, a metal, and sulfate, which is an inorganic polyatomic ion.