H2S is the chemical formula for barium chloride.
Barium Chlorite is Ba(ClO2)2
BaCl2
BaCl2.
BaCl2
BaCl2
baCl2
BaCl2
BaCl2
One compound would be Silver Chloride - chemical formula AgCl
Ba3N2
the chemical formula for carbon is C and for chlorine is Cl.
The chemical symbols for phosphorus and barium are P and Ba respectively. Chemical formula are only applicable for compounds.
In the compound dichloride there would be two chlorine atoms. This is because the compound dichloride is a binary covalent compound and these compound always follow the prefixs such as di, tri, mono, etc.
Assuming that the questioner would have written BaCl2 instead of BaCI2, if typographic resources were available to do so, the answer is "barium and chlorine". The formula as written shows the presence of barium, carbon, and iodine, but this formula does not correspond to any known compound.
BaCl2
Barium's charge is 2+ and Chlorine's charge is 1- so the formula would be BaCl2
It would produce Barium oxide (BaO) and Chlorine gas (Cl2) BaCl2 + O2 --> BaO + Cl2
One compound would be Silver Chloride - chemical formula AgCl
Ba3N2
NaCl salt
The new compound is called "sodium chloride", has the formula NaCl, and has ionic bonds.
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
There is no such compound as BaNO3. The correct formula for barium nitrate is Ba(NO3)2 and in this case, each formula unit would have 6 x 6.02x10^23 atoms of oxygen
the chemical formula for carbon is C and for chlorine is Cl.
The formula would be AlCl3, which is aluminum chloride.