Superscript and subscript together after the same atom












4














In the chemical formula of some ion compounds, there is the necessity to write the charge in the superscript and the numbers of atoms in the subscript, but together at the right of the same symbol like in the PO43- ion:



stacked vs. staggered notation for the phosphate anion



Does IUPAC provide universal guidelines saying that I have to typewrite the two numbers in a stacked or staggered way?










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4














In the chemical formula of some ion compounds, there is the necessity to write the charge in the superscript and the numbers of atoms in the subscript, but together at the right of the same symbol like in the PO43- ion:



stacked vs. staggered notation for the phosphate anion



Does IUPAC provide universal guidelines saying that I have to typewrite the two numbers in a stacked or staggered way?










share|improve this question









New contributor




andreagoo8 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1




    chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2803/…
    – Nilay Ghosh
    2 days ago














4












4








4







In the chemical formula of some ion compounds, there is the necessity to write the charge in the superscript and the numbers of atoms in the subscript, but together at the right of the same symbol like in the PO43- ion:



stacked vs. staggered notation for the phosphate anion



Does IUPAC provide universal guidelines saying that I have to typewrite the two numbers in a stacked or staggered way?










share|improve this question









New contributor




andreagoo8 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











In the chemical formula of some ion compounds, there is the necessity to write the charge in the superscript and the numbers of atoms in the subscript, but together at the right of the same symbol like in the PO43- ion:



stacked vs. staggered notation for the phosphate anion



Does IUPAC provide universal guidelines saying that I have to typewrite the two numbers in a stacked or staggered way?







ions notation






share|improve this question









New contributor




andreagoo8 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











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edited 2 days ago









andselisk

13.9k648103




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asked 2 days ago









andreagoo8andreagoo8

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  • 1




    chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2803/…
    – Nilay Ghosh
    2 days ago














  • 1




    chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2803/…
    – Nilay Ghosh
    2 days ago








1




1




chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2803/…
– Nilay Ghosh
2 days ago




chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2803/…
– Nilay Ghosh
2 days ago










2 Answers
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10














From IUPAC Green Book [1, p. 51]:




In writing the formula for a complex ion, spacing for charge number can be added (staggered arrangement), as well as parentheses: $ce{SO4^2-}$, $ce{(SO4)^2-}$. The staggered arrangement is now recommended.




Also, as you are apparently a $mathrm{LaTeX}$-user, the same convention is used by default in chemmacros package. From the manual:




If a compound does not start with a sub- or superscript and there is both a sub- and a superscript, the superscript is shifted additionally by a length determined from the option charge-hshift = {❬dim❭}, also see page 13f.



The second point follows IUPAC’s recommendations.




References:




  1. IUPAC “Green Book” Quantities, Units, and Symbols in Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed.; Cohen, R. E., Mills, I., Eds.; IUPAC Recommendations; RSC Pub: Cambridge, UK, 2007. ISBN 978-0-85404-433-7.






share|improve this answer































    9














    International and various national standards (e.g. ISO 80000, DIN 1338) do not agree with the typographic disaster of the staggered notation that was introduced in Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry – IUPAC Recommendations 2005 (Red Book). The standardized notation still is aligned: $mathrm{PO_4^{3-}}$ or $mathrm{(PO_4)^{3-}}$.



    Nevertheless, the current IUPAC recommendations as well as the ACS Style Guide stagger the subscript and superscript: $mathrm{PO_4{}^{3-}}$






    share|improve this answer





















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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

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      active

      oldest

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      active

      oldest

      votes









      10














      From IUPAC Green Book [1, p. 51]:




      In writing the formula for a complex ion, spacing for charge number can be added (staggered arrangement), as well as parentheses: $ce{SO4^2-}$, $ce{(SO4)^2-}$. The staggered arrangement is now recommended.




      Also, as you are apparently a $mathrm{LaTeX}$-user, the same convention is used by default in chemmacros package. From the manual:




      If a compound does not start with a sub- or superscript and there is both a sub- and a superscript, the superscript is shifted additionally by a length determined from the option charge-hshift = {❬dim❭}, also see page 13f.



      The second point follows IUPAC’s recommendations.




      References:




      1. IUPAC “Green Book” Quantities, Units, and Symbols in Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed.; Cohen, R. E., Mills, I., Eds.; IUPAC Recommendations; RSC Pub: Cambridge, UK, 2007. ISBN 978-0-85404-433-7.






      share|improve this answer




























        10














        From IUPAC Green Book [1, p. 51]:




        In writing the formula for a complex ion, spacing for charge number can be added (staggered arrangement), as well as parentheses: $ce{SO4^2-}$, $ce{(SO4)^2-}$. The staggered arrangement is now recommended.




        Also, as you are apparently a $mathrm{LaTeX}$-user, the same convention is used by default in chemmacros package. From the manual:




        If a compound does not start with a sub- or superscript and there is both a sub- and a superscript, the superscript is shifted additionally by a length determined from the option charge-hshift = {❬dim❭}, also see page 13f.



        The second point follows IUPAC’s recommendations.




        References:




        1. IUPAC “Green Book” Quantities, Units, and Symbols in Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed.; Cohen, R. E., Mills, I., Eds.; IUPAC Recommendations; RSC Pub: Cambridge, UK, 2007. ISBN 978-0-85404-433-7.






        share|improve this answer


























          10












          10








          10






          From IUPAC Green Book [1, p. 51]:




          In writing the formula for a complex ion, spacing for charge number can be added (staggered arrangement), as well as parentheses: $ce{SO4^2-}$, $ce{(SO4)^2-}$. The staggered arrangement is now recommended.




          Also, as you are apparently a $mathrm{LaTeX}$-user, the same convention is used by default in chemmacros package. From the manual:




          If a compound does not start with a sub- or superscript and there is both a sub- and a superscript, the superscript is shifted additionally by a length determined from the option charge-hshift = {❬dim❭}, also see page 13f.



          The second point follows IUPAC’s recommendations.




          References:




          1. IUPAC “Green Book” Quantities, Units, and Symbols in Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed.; Cohen, R. E., Mills, I., Eds.; IUPAC Recommendations; RSC Pub: Cambridge, UK, 2007. ISBN 978-0-85404-433-7.






          share|improve this answer














          From IUPAC Green Book [1, p. 51]:




          In writing the formula for a complex ion, spacing for charge number can be added (staggered arrangement), as well as parentheses: $ce{SO4^2-}$, $ce{(SO4)^2-}$. The staggered arrangement is now recommended.




          Also, as you are apparently a $mathrm{LaTeX}$-user, the same convention is used by default in chemmacros package. From the manual:




          If a compound does not start with a sub- or superscript and there is both a sub- and a superscript, the superscript is shifted additionally by a length determined from the option charge-hshift = {❬dim❭}, also see page 13f.



          The second point follows IUPAC’s recommendations.




          References:




          1. IUPAC “Green Book” Quantities, Units, and Symbols in Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed.; Cohen, R. E., Mills, I., Eds.; IUPAC Recommendations; RSC Pub: Cambridge, UK, 2007. ISBN 978-0-85404-433-7.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 2 days ago

























          answered 2 days ago









          andseliskandselisk

          13.9k648103




          13.9k648103























              9














              International and various national standards (e.g. ISO 80000, DIN 1338) do not agree with the typographic disaster of the staggered notation that was introduced in Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry – IUPAC Recommendations 2005 (Red Book). The standardized notation still is aligned: $mathrm{PO_4^{3-}}$ or $mathrm{(PO_4)^{3-}}$.



              Nevertheless, the current IUPAC recommendations as well as the ACS Style Guide stagger the subscript and superscript: $mathrm{PO_4{}^{3-}}$






              share|improve this answer


























                9














                International and various national standards (e.g. ISO 80000, DIN 1338) do not agree with the typographic disaster of the staggered notation that was introduced in Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry – IUPAC Recommendations 2005 (Red Book). The standardized notation still is aligned: $mathrm{PO_4^{3-}}$ or $mathrm{(PO_4)^{3-}}$.



                Nevertheless, the current IUPAC recommendations as well as the ACS Style Guide stagger the subscript and superscript: $mathrm{PO_4{}^{3-}}$






                share|improve this answer
























                  9












                  9








                  9






                  International and various national standards (e.g. ISO 80000, DIN 1338) do not agree with the typographic disaster of the staggered notation that was introduced in Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry – IUPAC Recommendations 2005 (Red Book). The standardized notation still is aligned: $mathrm{PO_4^{3-}}$ or $mathrm{(PO_4)^{3-}}$.



                  Nevertheless, the current IUPAC recommendations as well as the ACS Style Guide stagger the subscript and superscript: $mathrm{PO_4{}^{3-}}$






                  share|improve this answer












                  International and various national standards (e.g. ISO 80000, DIN 1338) do not agree with the typographic disaster of the staggered notation that was introduced in Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry – IUPAC Recommendations 2005 (Red Book). The standardized notation still is aligned: $mathrm{PO_4^{3-}}$ or $mathrm{(PO_4)^{3-}}$.



                  Nevertheless, the current IUPAC recommendations as well as the ACS Style Guide stagger the subscript and superscript: $mathrm{PO_4{}^{3-}}$







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 2 days ago









                  LoongLoong

                  32.8k881167




                  32.8k881167






















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