Because a glass of cordial contains far more than one chemical.
This formula could be written in more than one way, but one way is: F3CSF5.
The chemical formula of 3 gold atoms and one bromide atom could vary in writing. The word 'formula' could mean that it could be written to how it got to the result, or could be just the result. The most common formula writing for this is writing the 'G' with a small 3 next to the bottom right side of the 'G', and then adding a 'Br' after the 'G' with a small 3.
By looking at an actual chemical formula for a compound, we could tell you how many hydrogen atoms there are per molecule (or at least per formula unit) of that compound.Without the specific chemical formula, we can't. So the question is meaningless ... how many hydrogen atoms are present in a chemical formula depends on what the chemical formula is.
It could be KHBr2O6 (in analogy with disulfate), though I'm not sure about its existance.
NaCl Sodium (Na) Chlorine (Cl). Compound is called Sodium Chloride.
Because a glass of cordial contains far more than one chemical.
There is no chemical formula for chicken - at least none that could be written here.
No, it is a chemical formula for the insecticide known as DDT. A virus is a twist of RNA or DNA inside a protein sheath, it doesn't have a chemical formula as such, not one that could be easily written.
This formula could be written in more than one way, but one way is: F3CSF5.
The chemical formula of 3 gold atoms and one bromide atom could vary in writing. The word 'formula' could mean that it could be written to how it got to the result, or could be just the result. The most common formula writing for this is writing the 'G' with a small 3 next to the bottom right side of the 'G', and then adding a 'Br' after the 'G' with a small 3.
He was doing his best to be cordial, but I could see by his face that he was skeptical. He and his neighbors had always had a cordial relationship, so he was confused when they began to ignore him.
By looking at an actual chemical formula for a compound, we could tell you how many hydrogen atoms there are per molecule (or at least per formula unit) of that compound.Without the specific chemical formula, we can't. So the question is meaningless ... how many hydrogen atoms are present in a chemical formula depends on what the chemical formula is.
The empirical formula is representative for the chemical composition of a compound; the structural formula is representative for the spatial structure of the compound.
It could be KHBr2O6 (in analogy with disulfate), though I'm not sure about its existance.
The chemical formula of sodium chloride is not changed by dissolution.
Electricity is not a chemical and it does not have a chemical formula. Electric current consists of moving electrons; static electricity consists of unmoving electrons.
NaCl Sodium (Na) Chlorine (Cl). Compound is called Sodium Chloride.