No, their physical and chemical properties can be different from the constituent elements.
Example :
Sodium is a silvery, soft, light metal that combusts if it becomes wet.
Chlorine is a greenish-yellow gas that is lethal when inhaled.
The compound they form is sodium chloride, or table salt, which is stable and non-toxic.
No. Their properties are not melds of their elemental constituents, they present new electron surfaces/configurations which make each compound unique.
For instance Hydrogen and Oxygen are gasses with a whole range of unique properties of their own. Combine them as the compound water and yu have a new substance with a whole range of unique properties of its own.
No. Think of hydrogen and oxygen and water.
No. The properties of compounds are different from the properties of their component elements.
No
no
Yes
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For "only metals" the answer is alloys or intermetallic compounds, formed of course from atom of metals - the bonds are of metallic type.All other chemical compounds contain atoms of chemical elements, metals or nonmetals.
For "only metals" the answer is alloys or intermetallic compounds, formed of course from atom of metals - the bonds are of metallic type.All other chemical compounds contain atoms of chemical elements, metals or nonmetals.
Cations and anions compse ionic chemical compounds.
2
Functional groups help to determine how the molecule reacts. For instance, if a carbon chain has a large number of methyl groups, then you would know that the molecule would be hydrophobic and found in a hydrophobic environment. On the other hand, if a carbon chain had a carboxyl group, then it would be found in a hydrophilic environment and would make the solution acidic. In addition to determine what kind of solutions they would be found in, functional groups indicate what the molecule will react with and what it will bind to.
The elements that compose it and the arrangement of its atoms
I'm pretty sure is is a Compound. A compound is a substance that is made up of more than on element. The properties of matter mostly depend on how atoms of different elements are combined in compounds.
The elements that compose it and the arrangement of its atoms
A specific chemical element don't contain any other elements.
For "only metals" the answer is alloys or intermetallic compounds, formed of course from atom of metals - the bonds are of metallic type.All other chemical compounds contain atoms of chemical elements, metals or nonmetals.
For "only metals" the answer is alloys or intermetallic compounds, formed of course from atom of metals - the bonds are of metallic type.All other chemical compounds contain atoms of chemical elements, metals or nonmetals.
For "only metals" the answer is alloys or intermetallic compounds, formed of course from atom of metals - the bonds are of metallic type.All other chemical compounds contain atoms of chemical elements, metals or nonmetals.
Cations and anions compse ionic chemical compounds.
All the chemical elements are composed from protons, neutrons and electrons (an exception is 1H).
C, H and O: the chemical structure is CH3-CH2-OH grtz, KTTK
Molecular compounds are formed when the intramolecular bonds are covalent instead of ionic. These are formed by non-metallic atoms bonding with other non-metallic atoms.
They both compose of Atoms (: