Yes, the term "pentaoxide" and "pentoxide" can both be used to refer to a compound containing five oxygen atoms. The prefix "penta-" indicates five, and "oxide" refers to a compound containing oxygen. Therefore, both terms are acceptable and interchangeable when describing a compound with five oxygen atoms.
It is phosphorus pentaoxide P2O5 which exists in dimeric form P4O10.
Dihydrogen pentaoxide would mean 2 hydrogens and 5 oxygens, or H2O5. This would be an exceedingly unstable molecule, since two hydrogen atoms normally combine with only one oxygen atom, not five.
The chemical formula for diphosphorous pentaoxide is P2O5.
An oxide of phosphorus: diphosphorus pentaoxide
The covalent compound with the chemical formula N2O5 is dinitrogen pentoxide.
it is Diphosphorus pentaoxide but it exists as dimer P4O10.
The common name of this compound is phosphorus pentaoxide and the systematic name is Potassium(V) Oxide.
The Covalent Compound As205 is know as diarsenic pentaoxide.
The covalent compound N2O5 is called dinitrogen pentoxide. It is a binary compound composed of nitrogen and oxygen atoms held together by covalent bonds.
Yes, the term "pentaoxide" and "pentoxide" can both be used to refer to a compound containing five oxygen atoms. The prefix "penta-" indicates five, and "oxide" refers to a compound containing oxygen. Therefore, both terms are acceptable and interchangeable when describing a compound with five oxygen atoms.
The name of the covalent compound N2O5 is Dinitrogen Pentoxide. N2O5 is a rare example of a compound that adopts two structures depending on the conditions: most commonly it is a salt, but under some conditions it is a polar molecule: N2O5 ⇌ [NO2+][NO3−]
The chemical formula of phosphorus pentoxide is P4O10. It is a covalent compound composed of four phosphorus atoms and ten oxygen atoms.
It is P2O5.
It is molecular
The proper name for the compound P4O6 is Tetraphosphorus Hexoxide. It is also known as Phosphorus Trioxide.P = PhosphorusO = OxygenIts molar mass is 219.88 g mol−1
yes