189 819 letters
It is: H2SO4 ============================== While there is certainly the chemical with the formula H2SO4, there is no "dihydrogen sulfate" name. H2SO4 is called sulfuric acid, and that is the only name recognized by the IUPAC for H2SO4. So if you are naming H2SO4 then use "sulfuric acid", do not use "dihydrogen sulfate."
Tea is composed of various compounds, but one of the main ones responsible for its taste and color is the group of chemicals known as polyphenols. The specific polyphenols in tea include catechins, theaflavins, and thearubigins. So, there isn't a single chemical name for tea like H2O for water.
The chemical symbol for sodium thiosulphate (hypo) is Na2S2O3•5H2O.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some chemistry now. So, H2SO2 is actually not a thing. But if you meant H2SO4, that's sulfuric acid. And if you meant H2S, that's hydrogen sulfide. So, like, close but not quite there, you know?
C means Carbon and H means Hydrogen so it is possibly Hydrocarbon. It is actually carbogen according to wikipedia
Oh, dude, the scientific name for titin is like super long and fancy. It's called "connectin" or "ruler protein" in the scientific world, but if you wanna get all formal, it's officially known as "TTN." So, yeah, that's the deal with titin, man. Like, it's a big deal in muscles and stuff.
Cornmeal is a complex mixture so does not have a chemical name.
"Hcook" is not a known chemical compound, so it has no chemical name.Is this a misspelling of something else, I couldn't retrieve it anyhow.
Sulfur dioxide is the name of the compound with the chemical formula SO.
The correct chemical name for N2O5 is dinitrogen pentoxide.
Coal is mostly carbon, but often has impurities of sulfur and several other elements. It also doesn't have an exact and universal chemical formula, so no, there is no chemical name for coal.
"The chemical name is a precise and standardized description of a molecule. If the molecule is very complicated, then the chemical name will be very complicated (i.e., long), too. That's just how the chemical naming system works. If the chemical name isn't practical, then another name will be coined for it in practical use."
Sorry, but there's no such chemical, not even C2H5 does exist. So, ... it doesn't have a name in chemistry.
Not as far as I know. I think it's still My Chemical Romance, they had no reason to change it. so, yeah... they better not have! ;)
Yes, and no. The Chemical Brothers used to be called the dust brothers. there was another group called the dust brothers who got their name before the chemical brothers did, so they got charges and changed their name to the chemical brothers
It's a covalent, or molecular compound, so prefixes are required. Its name is pentaphosphorus octochloride.
The chemical formula of sulfur dioxide is SO2 (not mono and di in the same name !).