The chemical formula for water, liquid, solid or gaseous is the same - H2O
In some texts you will find a little cursive L in brackets to indicate that it is liquid, or a little g to indicate gas, or a little s to indicate solid.
This is not a chemical formula or equation.
The formular for that reaction is C2O + H2O = C2H2O if you do not take concentrations of substances going into the reaction.
Sodium and Chlorine are the elements in common salt. NaCl is the formular.
FeSO4*7H2O (the star/asterisk represents a dot).
In a chemical formula, a unit containing three atoms can represent various compounds. For example, water (H₂O) consists of three atoms: two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Another example is ammonia (NH₃), which has three hydrogen atoms bonded to one nitrogen atom. These simple molecular structures illustrate how three atoms can combine to form distinct chemical entities.
This is sodium chloride (NaCl) dissolved in water (H2O).
H20(s), ice is simply a solid state of water...
The hydronium ion is simply the water ion with an extra proton. (H+) So: H2O + H+ ---> H3O+
KNO3
h2so4
Formula: PCl3
Formula: Mg3P2
It is a common typographic error for formula.
by using formular
by no the formular.
Zn(Mno4)7
The Euler characteristic for any simply connected polyhedron isF + V = E + 2And the word is formula, not formular!