Chemical compounds have very different properties compared to metals.
Metallic compounds have more similar qualities to original metals. All of these metals are good conductors of heat. All of them have a luster.
Chemical compounds have very different properties compared to metals.
Metallic compounds have more similar qualities to original metals. All of these metals are good conductors of heat. All of them have a luster.
original elements
A mixture is formed from compounds but both are formed from atoms.
When a substance dissolves in a solvent it is combined with the solvent to form a new compound. This new compound will have different chemical properties than either of the original compounds.
When a substance changes but still retains its original properties, the change is called a physical change. If it didn't retain its original properties, then it went through a chemical change.
solids , liquids , and gases can form compounds
No. Compounds have unique chemical and physical properties different from the elements of which they are made.
The properties from the original elements are all left behind; almost no compound shows any of the properties of its constituent elements (the most widely used example of this is sodium and chlorine forming sodium chloride).
In most cases, when two elements form a compound, the new compound has a set of chemical properties that are entirely different from its reactants. However, in the case of diatomic compounds, such as O2, then yes, the compound retains the properties of its elemental parts.
The original paint colors for the Nissan 240sx were Blue Mist Metallic, Light Pewter Metallic, Dark Pewter Metallic, Dark Blue metallic, Super White, Dark Red Metallic, Thunder Black, and Hot Red. They stopped manufacturing the car in 1999.
original elements
A mixture is formed from compounds but both are formed from atoms.
When a substance dissolves in a solvent it is combined with the solvent to form a new compound. This new compound will have different chemical properties than either of the original compounds.
No. When elements combine to form compounds the resulting chemical properties may be very different from those of the elements that make it. The components of a mixture are not chemically combined and retain their original properties.
True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
Materials lose their original properties when their spatial conditions change, provided their atomic configuration change.
When a substance changes but still retains its original properties, the change is called a physical change. If it didn't retain its original properties, then it went through a chemical change.