Tetraphosphorus decaoxide looks correct BUT when a prefix ends in "a" or "o" and the anion name begins with a vowel, the "a" or "o" on the prefix is dropped to avoid having two vowels together in the name. So the name is tetraphosphorus decoxide.
The proper name for the compound P4O6 is Tetraphosphorus Hexoxide. It is also known as Phosphorus Trioxide.
P = Phosphorus
O = Oxygen
Its molar mass is 219.88 g mol−1
P4O10 is Phosphorus pentoxide. It's melting point is 340oC, which is well below room temperature of 25oC. This makes it a solid.
Yes as it is a ionic compound and hence conducts electricity in molten
It's called tetraphosphorus hexoxide.
diphosphorous tetroxide
pentphosphorus tetraoxide
Triphosphorous hexaoxide.
tetraphosphorus dec(a)oxide
P and O are both nonmetals, this is a compound. It has covalent bonds because of them being nonmetals. There are no ions in covalent bonds. No, there are no ions in it.
P4O10 is acidic.
P4O10 is acidic.
P4O10 is a solid element. It is a combination of phosphorus and oxygen.
Tetraphosphorus Decoxide P4O10 is held by Van der Waals forces, which are weak intermolecular attractions between molecules. Thereby, it is a molecular compound, not covalent.
P4O10 is a covalent compound. This is because Phosphorous and Oxygen are both nonmetals.
P4O10 is acidic.
P4O10 is acidic.
P4O10 is a solid element. It is a combination of phosphorus and oxygen.
Tetraphosphorus Decoxide P4O10 is held by Van der Waals forces, which are weak intermolecular attractions between molecules. Thereby, it is a molecular compound, not covalent.
P4O10 is a covalent compound. This is because Phosphorous and Oxygen are both nonmetals.
P4O10 - P for Phosphorous, 4 for tetra; O for oxygen, 10 for dec-.
P4O10 + 6H2O = 4H3PO4 Phosphorus oxide reacst with water to produce phosphoric acid.
instead of drying ammonia,P4o10 reacts with it thereby disrupting the process.
It is a covalent compound.
Since 14 (4+10) moles of P4O10 contains 4 moles of Phosphorus, 8 moles of P4O10 will contain :: (8 x 4)/14 = 2.286 moles of Phosphorus
To solve this, you need to use the mole ratio derived from the chemical formula, P4O10, and you need the molar mass of P. 3.25 mol P4O10 x 4 mol P x 30.97 g P = 403 g P .......................1 mol P4O10 1 mol P
phophorus pentoxide