Silicon and oxygen combine to produce silicon dioxide, SiO2, which is found in nature as quartz or sand.
Plutonium react with hydrogen, oxygen, halogens, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, sulfur, phosphorous, acids, etc. Plutonium is a reactive metal.
Silicon (and oxygen).
Oxygen contain oxygen atoms and silicon contain silicon atoms.
Silicon will react easily with oxygen (to form the network solid SiO2), hydrogen (to form silane gas), and the halogens to form silicon halides.
no
Yes it can. Si + O2 --> SiO2
Plutonium react with hydrogen, oxygen, halogens, carbon, nitrogen, silicon, sulfur, phosphorous, acids, etc. Plutonium is a reactive metal.
Silicon (and oxygen).
There are 4 oxygen ions and 1 silicon ion in a silicon- oxygen tetrahedron.
Oxygen contain oxygen atoms and silicon contain silicon atoms.
Oxygen and silicon make up about 75% of Earth's crust, with oxygen being the most abundant element at around 46.6% and silicon at around 27.7%. Together, they form the majority of the minerals that make up the Earth's crust.
Silicon and oxygen, in this form. SiO2 Silicon dioxide.
Silicon will react easily with oxygen (to form the network solid SiO2), hydrogen (to form silane gas), and the halogens to form silicon halides.
SiO2 is a macromolecule. Each silicon atom is covalently bonded to four oxygen atoms and each oxygen atom is covalently bonded to two silicon atoms.
Silicon doesnt really react a lot unless it is under extremely high temperatures
Yes, you can make silicon dioxide out of silicon.
no