Tin itself is an element, abbreviated Sn, from the Latin Stannum.It's atomic number is 50 and its mass 120amu. See Wikipedia "tin" for details.
There are two such tin oxides: Tin (II) oxide with formula SnO and tin (IV) dioxide, with formula SnO2.
Tin, carbon, and oxygen can form tin dioxide (SnO2) when combined. This compound is also known as stannic oxide or tin(IV) oxide.
Tin dioxide, also known as cassiterite. I believe that it is tin oxide. Cassiterite appears to be a dioxide of tin The answer to this question is Tin (IV) Oxide since it is an Ionic not covalant. Tin dioxide says that it starts with a gas, but tin is a metal. So we need to worry about charges.
tin (IV) oxide it is actually Sn2O4 in simplified form.
Tin is primarily extracted from the mineral cassiterite, which is a tin oxide ore.
Tin is the number 50 on the periodic table of elements. Tin is obtained from the mineral Cassiterite, where it occurs as tin oxide.
The Answer To Your Question Is.... tin (IV) oxide
The correct name for the compound SnO is tin(II) oxide.
The formula for tin (IV) oxide is SnO2. This formula shows that each formula unit contains exactly one tin atom. Therefore, if 0.74 mole of tin (IV) oxide is heated sufficiently to cause complete disproportionation of the compound to its constituent elements, 0.74 moles of tin metal will be produced.
SnO2, if you meant (tin(IV) oxide) or tin dioxide that is
It is called tin (ll) oxide or stannous oxide.
The chemical formula for tin(IV) oxide is SnO2. Tin(III) oxide doesn't exist.
it is variable
The old formula for SnO2 is stannic oxide. Stannic oxide is a compound made of tin (Sn) and oxygen (O) atoms in a 1:2 ratio.
The chemical formula for tin(IV) oxide is SnO2. Tin(III) oxide doesn't exist.
A molecule of tin(IV) oxide (SnO2) contains 2 tin atoms (with 50 neutrons each) and 4 oxygen atoms (with 8 neutrons each). Therefore, the total number of neutrons in a molecule of tin(IV) oxide would be 2 tin atoms x 50 neutrons + 4 oxygen atoms x 8 neutrons = 116 neutrons.
google it mc 4=asfsd + go on google and type it in mcsquared