Examples:
Oxides: uranium dioxide, uranium trioxide, uranium octaoxide
Salts: ammonium diuranate, uranyl nitrate, uranyl acetate, uranium hehxafluoride, uranium chloride
and many others because uranium is a reactive metal.
uranyl nitrate, uranium dioxide, uranium octaoxide, uranium hexafluoride, uranyl acetate, uranium tetrachloride, uranium carbide, uranium nitride, uranium tetraiodide, uranium sulfide, ammonium diuranate
Uranium dioxide, triuranium octaoxide, uranium triiodide, uranium tetraiodide, uranium tetrachloride, uranium tetrafluoride, uranium hexafluoride, ammonium diuranate, uranium sulphide, uranium nitride, uranium carbides, uranium silicides and hundred others.
Uranium dioxide: UO2
Uranyl nitrate: UO2(NO3)2
Uranium compounds are: oxides as UO2 and U3O8, ammonium diuranate, uranyl nitrate, uranium hexafluoride, uranium tetrafluoride, uranyl phosphte, uranium carbides, uranium nitride etc.
Common compound don't contain uranium.
But granite, coal, phosphate fertilizers and also ocean water contain uranium.
1. Uranium contain atoms, not molecules. 2. Many chemical compounds contain in the molecule uranium: uranium dioxide, uranium tetrafluoride, uranyl nitrate, etc.
I think you're missing an exponent on the number of molecules. Otherwise, it's just a 2-step conversion: molecules to moles, then moles to mass, based on the compound's molar mass of 352g/mol.
Uranium is a metal, natural, radioactive. Uranium exist only as minerals in the nature. Soils contain traces of uranium.
practically everything on earth contains some uranium
no, but some luminescent signs contain radioactive tritium.
1. Uranium contain atoms, not molecules. 2. Many chemical compounds contain in the molecule uranium: uranium dioxide, uranium tetrafluoride, uranyl nitrate, etc.
Uranium (as an element) has atoms, not molecules; uranium compounds are molecules.
2
1. Yes, all coals contain traces of uranium. 2. Uranium is not combustible; the "burning" of uranium in nuclear reactors is a nuclear reaction, not a reaction with oxygen.
Uranium is a chemical element and doesn't contain other elements,As all chemical elements uranium is formed from protons, neutrons and electrons.
Uranium and thorium minerals contain radon.
No
None. A pellet of uranium contains uranium, not coal.
I think you're missing an exponent on the number of molecules. Otherwise, it's just a 2-step conversion: molecules to moles, then moles to mass, based on the compound's molar mass of 352g/mol.
Uranium is a metal, natural, radioactive. Uranium exist only as minerals in the nature. Soils contain traces of uranium.
practically everything on earth contains some uranium
Yes, all coals contain traces of uranium.