It utterly depends. For instance salt (NaCl) behaves nothing like either Sodium or Chlorine, whist FBr (Fluorine and Bromine) has properties similar to Chlorine (ie another halogen). I suspect it depends on the form of bonding: covalent compounds between similar elements, assuming they are not too large, may have similar properties, whilst ionic compounds will not. However, for large covalent compounds like proteins this idea breaks down.
In most cases, no.
A compound does not always retain the properties of the substances that make it up. The properties of a compound are determined by the arrangement of atoms and the type of chemical bonds present, which can result in new properties not seen in the individual elements.
Compounds are made up of elements. There is chemical reaction. The properties are totally different in case of the compounds than that of the elements.
When compounds are formed through chemical reactions, the individual properties of the elements that make them up are typically lost, and the compound exhibits its own unique properties. The compound's properties are determined by the arrangement and bonding of the constituent atoms.
A substance that has properties different from the chemical elements in it is a chemical compound. A chemical compound is built from chemical elements that are chemically bonded together. And the "finished product" will have chemical properties that are unique to that compound, and different from the properties of the substances that make it up.
particles called atoms are the smallest unit. Several atoms combine to make a molecule and molecules are what form substances such as water
There is no general relationship.
There is no general relationship.
Yes, you can predict the properties of a compound based on the properties of the elements it is composed of. This is because the properties of a compound are determined by how its constituent elements interact with each other through chemical bonds. For example, if the elements in a compound have high electronegativity, the compound is likely to have polar covalent bonds and exhibit properties like high solubility in water and good conductivity.
The properties of a compound are different from those of the elements that make it up. Compounds have unique physical and chemical properties that arise from the way the elements are bonded together, whereas the properties of individual elements are based on their atomic structure. Mixing elements together to form a compound can result in properties that are entirely different from those of the individual elements.
by mixing 2 simpler substances.
A chemical compound contain two or more different atoms.
Their properties?