Calcium bicarbonate, Ca(HCO3)2 , is called calcium bicarbonate.
There is no common name for this compound, because it is not common.
In fact, in nature there is no solid compound with this chemical composition. Nor has it seemed possible to create it artificially.
It can exist in solution, perhaps in water. But then a molecule of it would be something else, not Ca(HCO3)2
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Calcium bicarbonate is usually formed when calcium carbonate (CaCO3) reacts with carbonic acid (H2CO3).
CaCO3 + H2CO3 --> Ca(HCO3)2
Calcium bicarbonate can only exist in aqueous solution. Any attempt to isolate will result in it decomposing into calcium carbonate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Ca(HCO2)3
Perhaps you mean CaCO3 - that's calcium carbonate. CaCO2 doesn't seem to be a common compound.
Calcium Carbonate.
Calcium is an elemnt and its symbol is Ca, carbon monoxide is a compound and its formula is CO. There is no compound calcium carbon monoxide.
Calcium carbonate or calcium magnesium carbonate.
calcium carbonate, CaCO3
The chemical formula of calcium hydrogen carbonate is Ca(HCO3)2; this compound (which contain calcium, carbon and hydrogen) exist only in water solution.
The chemical formula of calcium carbonate is CaCO3.
The chemical name is calcium hydrogen carbonate.
There cannot be a balanced chemical formula for just a compound of something. You need a reactant to produce a product in order to balance an equation. In this case, you can get a chemical formula by this chemical name: calcium hydrogen carbonate. Since calcium has a +2 charge and hydrogen carbonate has a -1 charge, you need two hydrogen carbonates for every one calcium ion. The chemical formula is: Ca(HCO3)2.
Stalactites.Their material is the chemical compound calcium carbonate, not calcium and carbonate.
Calcium Carbonate
Calcium carbonate is a chemical compound.
Ca(HCO3)2
H2O, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen (water or dihydrogen monoxide) NaCl, a compound of sodium and chlorine (table salt or sodium chloride) CaCO3, a compound of calcium and carbonate (calcium carbonate)
calcium carbonate
Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3)
No. Starches are organically bonded carbohydrates, but calcium is an ionic compound with no hydrogen atoms.