IUPAC: Lead(IV) oxide Old method name: Lead dioxide
The stock IUPAC name for HgCO3 is mercury(II) carbonate.
Yes, mercury oxide and mercuric oxide are the same compound. The systematic name for this compound is mercury(II) oxide.
The chemical name for that formula is Mercurous Dioxide.
The IUPAC name of carbonyl chloride is Phosgene.
mercuric oxide That name is used as the systematic or common name for a compound. This compound is also known as Mercury (II) oxide due to the oxidation number of a transition metal being used in the IUPAC nomenclature. The compound, Hg2O, would, therefore, be known as Mercury (I) oxide or mercurous oxide.
IUPAC: Lead(IV) oxide Old method name: Lead dioxide
The chemical formula for Mercury I oxide is Hg2O, and the formula for Mercury II oxide is HgO.
The stock IUPAC name for HgCO3 is mercury(II) carbonate.
Yes, mercury oxide and mercuric oxide are the same compound. The systematic name for this compound is mercury(II) oxide.
The chemical name for that formula is Mercurous Dioxide.
The name of the compound iron II and oxygen (FeO) is iron(II) oxide - the correct name after the inorganic chemistry nomenclature of IUPAC - or ferrous oxide.
In English language: zinc oxide. Of course in other languages the name is different.Technically it would be zinc (II) oxide, but +2 is by such a margin the most common oxidation state for zinc that it's usually just called "zinc oxide."
H2O, dihydrogen oxide; water H2O ¼ [OH2], oxidane (parent hydride name), dihydridooxygen 1H2O, diprotium oxide; (1H2)water D2O ¼ 2H2O, dideuterium oxide; (2H2)water T2O ¼ 3H2O, ditritium oxide; (3H2)water source: http://old.iupac.org/publications/books/rbook/Red_Book_2005.pdf page 306
The chemical formula NO according to the IUPAC nomenclature is nitric oxide.
The Answer To Your Question Is.... tin (IV) oxide
CaO is the chemical formula of calcium oxide.