Diphosphorus Pentoxide is the name of the formula P2O5.
Phosphorus pentoxide or phosphorus(V) oxide.
The common name of this compound is phosphorus pentaoxide and the systematic name is Potassium(V) Oxide.
P2O5 is the empirical formula for phosphorus(V) oxide, P4O10.
P is phosphorus, O is oxygen P2O5 molecules have two (di-) P atoms, and five (pent-) O atoms, so the name of the compound is diphosphorus pentoxide.
The chemical formula for the compound formed when P2O5 reacts with an amide is P2O5(NH2)2.
The chemical formula P2O5 represents a formula unit. This is because P2O5 is an ionic compound, consisting of a combination of phosphorus and oxygen ions in a fixed ratio.
Tetraphosphorous decoxide would be the formal IUAPC name, though P2O5 is the empirical formulation called phosphorous pentoxide, however it is improper to reduce covalent bonds.
P2o5
5, the subscript immediately after the atomic symbol O for oxygen.
The correct name for P2O5 is diphosphorus pentoxide. This compound is composed of two phosphorus atoms and five oxygen atoms. The prefix "di-" indicates the presence of two phosphorus atoms, while the suffix "-pentoxide" indicates the presence of five oxygen atoms.
The compound name for P2O5 is diphosphorus pentoxide.
The compound P2O5 is called diphosphorus pentoxide.