The IUPAC, (International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry), almost certainly have agreed on rules for describing by name a novel chemical compound.
This is quite a separate issue from trade names and trademarks.
FeO is not a nonmetal; it is a compound composed of iron (a metal) and oxygen (a nonmetal).
SO2 is not a metal; it is a nonmetal compound.
A general equation showing one nonmetal replacing another nonmetal in a compound is represented by the following formula: A + BC -> AC + B. Here, element A (a nonmetal) displaces element B in compound BC to form a new compound AC.
No, silver chloride is a compound, so the terms, metal and nonmetal don't apply to it.
Fluoride is the ion of fluorine, which is a nonmetal.
For naming a binary compound composed of a metal bonded to a nonmetal, the name of the metal is written first followed by the name of the nonmetal with the ending changed to "-ide." For example, sodium chloride is the name for the compound formed by sodium (metal) bonding with chlorine (nonmetal).
metal
FeO is not a nonmetal; it is a compound composed of iron (a metal) and oxygen (a nonmetal).
SO2 is not a metal; it is a nonmetal compound.
A general equation showing one nonmetal replacing another nonmetal in a compound is represented by the following formula: A + BC -> AC + B. Here, element A (a nonmetal) displaces element B in compound BC to form a new compound AC.
A molecular compound.
No, silver chloride is a compound, so the terms, metal and nonmetal don't apply to it.
Fluoride is the ion of fluorine, which is a nonmetal.
Al2 (SO3)3Aluminum Sulfate? I'm not sure.It is an Ionic Compound, so it is named by the name of the metal (aluminum) followed by the shortened name of the nonmetal. (sulfate)
Salt is a compound of Sodium (Na) and of Chlorine (Cl), thus, it is a nonmetal because it is a compound of 2 nonmetals. Na is not a nonmetal it is a highly active metal. This can be easily googled.
No, P2O4 is not an ionic compound because it is a covalent compound. Ionic compounds are formed between metals and nonmetals, where electrons are transferred from one atom to another to form ions, whereas covalent compounds are formed between nonmetals by sharing electrons.
No: The distinction between metals and nonmetals is a property of elements or mixtures of elements (alloys), but dinitrogen pentabromide is a compound.