Nitrogen hydroxide don't exist ! Any formula is an error !
You think probably to ammonium hydroxide NH4OH.
Nitrogen hydroxide oxide (N(OH)2O)hope this helps you Nitrogen hydroxide oxide (N(OH)2O)hope this helps you
The elements in ammonium hydroxide are nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen.
Wrong N(oh)3Nitrogen hydroxide is NOT an exsisting compound. Only hydroxides of metallic elements are possible. The only N-containing 'hydroxide' I know about, is the often wrongly formulated formula for AMMONIA, NH4OH, but this should be written as NH3. However NH4OH is never called nitrogen hydroxide, but ammonium hydroxide.
The formula for hydrogen hydroxide is H2O.
Sodium hydroxide.
Nitrogen hydroxide oxide (N(OH)2O)hope this helps you Nitrogen hydroxide oxide (N(OH)2O)hope this helps you
The formula of nitrogen hydroxide is not possible as nitrogen does not typically form hydroxides. However, nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) are common oxides of nitrogen.
The elements in ammonium hydroxide are nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen.
the elements found in nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen
Yes, ammonium hydroxide contains nitrogen as part of its polyatomic cation, ammonium, with formula NH4+1.
Wrong N(oh)3Nitrogen hydroxide is NOT an exsisting compound. Only hydroxides of metallic elements are possible. The only N-containing 'hydroxide' I know about, is the often wrongly formulated formula for AMMONIA, NH4OH, but this should be written as NH3. However NH4OH is never called nitrogen hydroxide, but ammonium hydroxide.
The answer is ammonia. But its official name is ammonium hydroxide, and it formula is NH4OH.
Nitrogen hydroxide does not exist as a stable compound. Nitrogen can form various oxides like nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but no stable compound exists that can be identified as "nitrogen hydroxide."
The elements in ammonium hydroxide are nitrogen, hydrogen, and oxygen.
The formula for hydrogen hydroxide is H2O.
The hydroxide ion's chemical formula is [OH]-
The formula for potassium hydroxide is KOH.