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the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
Yes. The properties of the molecule will differ from the properties of the individual atoms of which it is made.
Helium (He) and Be2+ ion (not beryllium element) have the same number of valence electrons (two). But their properties are different as they differ in the number of protons (2 for helium, 4 for beryllium) and hence they differ in ther properties.
Almost all the chemical properties of an atom are determined by the valence shell electrons or in general, by the no of electrons present in the atom. Since in an isotope and a general atom, no. of electrons is same, therefore they have similar chemical properties. Isotopes differ in atomic mass only and that is due to extra neutrons.
Chemical properties are determined by the electron configuration of an atom, not by its mass. These do not differ in all isotopes of one element, because isotopes have the same number of PROTONS thus the same electron configuration. Only the mass of different isotopes of one element is different by the different number of NEUTRONS.
No. Atoms of the same element have the same chemical properties.
Yes
chemical properties cannot be determined just by viewing or touching the substance and physical properties can be observed or measured without changing the composition of matter.
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
Isotopes are exactly same with respect to all the chemical properties but they differ with respect to physical properties.
Yes. The properties of the molecule will differ from the properties of the individual atoms of which it is made.
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
Isomers have different physical and chemical properties.
The chemical properties of an element depend on its electron configuration, which is in turn determined by the number of protons. Isotopes of an element differ in the number of neutrons, which, being neutral, have not influence on chemical properties.
The rates of mechanical weathering does not affect anything since the chemical properties remain unchanged. Only chemical weathering affects the chemical properties of an object.
Physical properties: paint is a thick colored liquid with a distinct smell. Chemical properties differ depending on the paint...poster paint, oil-based house paint and car paint have vastly different chemical properties, but they're all paint.
because chemical properties are determined by the nomber of electrons and protons and all isotops have the same number electrons and protons. they differ in the number of neutrons alone which doesnt affect chemical properties