Answer:
disulfur tetroxide
Explanation:
Since both sulfur (S) and oxygen (O) are nonmetals, the compound is covalent. In covalent compounds, the IUPAC name includes the names of both the elements. However, the element listed last (oxygen) needs the suffix -ide. Furthermore, there should be a prefix denoting the amount of each element. The subscripts give you these amounts.
As such, if there are 2 (di-) sulfur atoms and 4 (tetra-) oxygen atoms in the compound, the IUPAC name must be disulfur tetroxide.
Seventeen elements are generally classified as nonmetals: most are gases (hydrogen, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, neon, chlorine, argon, krypton, xenon and radon);
one is a liquid (bromine); and a few are solids (carbon, phosphorus, sulfur, selenium, and iodine). Metalloids such as boron, silicon, and germanium are sometimes counted as nonmetals.
ANSWER:
Liquid:
Bromine - Br - 35
Solid:
Carbon - C - 6
Phosphorus - P - 15
Sulfur - S - 16
Selenium - Se - 34
Iodine - I - 53
Ideally because the elements become balanced such that the same amount of substance in the products is the same as the end product. Like how gases diffuse in a room. It kinda gets an equilibrium or how potassium per manganate spreads evenly in water. That’s an equilibrium
The phase of matter where atoms lose their electrons is plasma. It requires quite a bit of heat, too.