1 mole of HgO produces 1 mole of O2 according to the balanced chemical equation for the reaction. Therefore, 0.440 moles of HgO will produce 0.440 moles of O2.
The formula for mercurous peroxide is Hg2O2.
No, the equation is not balanced. The balanced equation should be: C3H6 + 4O2 -> 3CO2 + 3H2O.
The balanced equation for the reaction between chlorine and fluorine is: Cl2 + F2 → 2ClF
The balanced symbol equation for nitric oxide is: 2NO (g) + O2 (g) --> 2NO2 (g)
the balanced equation of mercuryII oxide HgO undergoes a chemical change to form mercury and oxygen is given as .2HgO(s) --> 2Hg(l) + O2(g)The reaction is a redox reaction. Mercury (II) is reduced to zero charge. Oxygen is oxidized to zero charge.Molecule: HgO(s)
1 mole of HgO produces 1 mole of O2 according to the balanced chemical equation for the reaction. Therefore, 0.440 moles of HgO will produce 0.440 moles of O2.
The coefficient in front of the compound HgO in the formula 2HgO is 2. This means there are 2 moles of HgO for every 2 moles of the whole compound.
The chemical equation for mercury(II) oxide is HgO. It is composed of one mercury (Hg) atom and one oxygen (O) atom.
By using the balanced chemical equation for the decomposition of mercury(II) oxide (HgO): 2 HgO -> 2 Hg + O2, we see that 1 mol of HgO produces 1 mol of O2. Therefore, 0.437 mol of HgO will produce 0.437 mol of O2. To convert mol to grams, we use the molar mass of oxygen: 32.00 g/mol. so, 0.437 mol of O2 is equivalent to 0.437 mol * 32.00 g/mol = 13.92 grams of O2.
1 mole HgO = 216.59g HgO = 6.022 x 1023 molecules HgO 64.0g HgO x (1mol HgO/216.59g HgO) x (6.022 x 1023 molecules HgO/mol HgO) = 1.78 x 1023 molecules HgO
The chemical formula (NOT: equation) for mercury oxide is (there are two possibillities):Mercury(I) oxide (mercurous oxide), Hg2O.Mercury(II) oxide (mercuric oxide), HgO
The formula for mercurous peroxide is Hg2O2.
No, the chemical equation is not balanced. The correct balanced equation is 2SO2 + O2 → 2SO3.
A balanced chemical equation has correct placed coefficients and a representative chemical equation need these coefficients.
No, the equation is not balanced. The balanced equation is 2CaSO3 → CaO + SO2 + O2.
No, the equation is not balanced. The balanced equation should be: C3H6 + 4O2 -> 3CO2 + 3H2O.