The IUPAC name of potassium malate is dipotassium 2-hydroxybutanedioate.
toluene is a common name - The IUPAC name for toluene is methylbenzene.
The IUPAC name is nitric acid - HNO3.
IUPAC name of aniline is phenylamine or benzenamine.
IUPAC name for fruits? fruits are made of thousands, if not millions of different compounds so IUPAC can't really name them
The IUPAC name for KCl is potassium chloride.
The IUPAC name of potassium malate is dipotassium 2-hydroxybutanedioate.
common name: Eriochrome black T IUPAC name: Sodium 4-(1-hydroxy-2-naphthylazo)-3-hydroxy-7-nitronapthalene-1-sulphonate
toluene is a common name - The IUPAC name for toluene is methylbenzene.
It's potassium fluorine (fluoride? dunno about the spelling. . . DX) Hope this helps!
The chemical forrmula of potassium heptaoxodichromate(VI) is K2Cr2O7. The systematic IUPAC name is potassium dichromate (VI).
The IUPAC name for butyl benzene is 4-phenylbutane. The IUPAC name for phenyl butane is 1-phenylbutane.
The question is not totally clear, because you've only provided the chemical formula and the question could be answered without doubt if you provide the structural formula (e.g. CH3CO2K or CH2OKCHO instead of adding all the present elements) but I'm guessing that the structure you mean is the potassium salt of acetic acid in a structural formula represented as CH3CO2K and an attempt to give a 2D structure is here (the non-connected hydrogens have a bond with the left carbon, the non-connencted oxygen has a double bond to the right carbon): H O H-C-C-O-K H The common name is potassium acetate. The use of this trivial form (acetate for ethanoic acid in general) is so common that this is called a retained IUPAC name. The systematic name is potassium ethanoate. There are a number of different options for C2H3O2K but they are less likely to be the desired compound, a few different options are alpha-potassium alkoxy ethanal with a structural formula of CH2OKCHO and potassium alkoxy ethylene oxide, a three membered ring with an oxygen in it (also called oxirane) with an potassium alkoxy group attachted to one of the carbons. Hope this is satisfying!
KBr stands for potassium bromide, which is a chemical compound commonly used in the manufacturing of photographic film and in infrared spectroscopy for sample preparation.
Common names are non-systematic names given to chemical compounds based on historical or traditional use, while IUPAC names are systematic names assigned according to a set of rules by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) to ensure clarity and consistency in chemical nomenclature. IUPAC names are preferred in scientific and technical communication due to their unambiguous nature.
Sodium benzoate is the common name for NaC6H5COO.
Sure! Here are some examples of IUPAC names: Ethanol - IUPAC name: Ethyl alcohol Acetaminophen - IUPAC name: N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetamide Phenolphthalein - IUPAC name: 3,3-Bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1(3H)-isobenzofuranone Aspirin - IUPAC name: 2-acetoxybenzoic acid