In the chemical formula CuSO4, there is one atom of sulfur (S) present. The formula represents copper(II) sulfate, which consists of one copper (Cu) atom, one sulfur (S) atom, and four oxygen (O) atoms. Therefore, CuSO4 contains a total of one sulfur atom.
Copper sulfate (CuSO4) is made up of one copper (Cu) atom, one sulfur (S) atom, and four oxygen (O) atoms. It is a blue crystalline solid that is commonly used as a fungicide, algaecide, and in various industrial applications.
CuSO4 isn't an element.
Each molecule of SO2 (sulphur dioxide) is made up of three atoms (1 sulphur atom and 2 oxygen atoms).
12.044*10^23 atoms 1.5055*10^23 S8 molecules
one mole contains 6.022 x 10^23 atoms. so multiply by 32
One molecule has 6 individual atoms. If the number you are looking for is much larger than that you need to know how many grams or moles of CuSO4 you are supposed to calculate.
Copper sulfate (CuSO4) is made up of one copper (Cu) atom, one sulfur (S) atom, and four oxygen (O) atoms. It is a blue crystalline solid that is commonly used as a fungicide, algaecide, and in various industrial applications.
8 atoms in S8
Copper on the Periodic Table of Elements is Cu. Copper is 1 atom. Sulphur on the Periodic Table of Elements is S. Sulphur is 1 atom. Oxygen on the Periodic Table of Elements is O. Since there is a 4 next to the O, it's 4 atoms of Oxygen. 1 Atom of Copper + 1 Atom of Sulphate + 4 Atoms of Oxygen = 6 Atoms.
There are 16 atoms in a molecule of sulphur, which has a chemical formula of S8.
The answer depends on how many formula units of CuSO4 you have. In one formula unit, there are 6 atoms (1 Cu, + 1 S + 4 O).
One mole of copper(II) sulfate (CuSO4) contains 4 oxygen atoms.
CuSO4 isn't an element.
The anhydrous copper(II) sulfate molecule has four oxygen atoms.
There are a total of 6 atoms in this formula - one copper, one sulfur and four oxygen atoms.
Yes, atoms of sulfur are identical.
In sulphur hexachloride SCl6 there are two elements, sulphur and chlorine, with six atoms of chlorine for every one of sulphur.