Yes, copper readily combines with several other elements. Combined with zinc it is brass, combined with tin it is bronze. It combines with many other elements including oxygen and sulfur.
Yes it can
Yes, copper and sulfur can combine to form a compound called copper sulfide. This compound can exist in different forms, such as copper (I) sulfide and copper (II) sulfide, depending on the oxidation state of copper.
Copper Oxide
Copper and chlorine can combine to form copper(II) chloride, which is a greenish-brown compound commonly used in the synthesis of other chemicals and as a wood preservative.
Copper and oxygen combine to form copper oxide. Copper oxide is a black or brown solid with the chemical formula Cu2O or CuO, depending on the oxidation state of copper.
copper
Yes, copper does form compounds with nonmetals.
brass
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There is copper (I) sulfide, with the formula Cu2S, and there is copper (II) sulfide with the formula CuS.
Yes, oxygen and copper are both examples of elements. Elements are substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances through chemical reactions, and both oxygen and copper consist of only one type of atom.
Alloys of zinc and copper are well known. There are no chemical compounds of zinc and copper.