Apart from the inert gases which are monoatomic all of the other elements bond to themselves and to atoms of other elements.
Each element can form stable, less stable or unstable compounds.
ionic
It depends on the element. If only one isotope occurs in nature, then all the atoms in a pure element are the same. However, most elements have two or more stable isotopes, so that there will be more than one kind of atom in most samples of such elements.
Elements with isotopic atoms? An isotope is the same form of an element, but with a different number of neutrons. An element with isotopes/"isotopic atoms" is simply an element with isotopes.
Sugar itself is not an element, hence has no elemental sign. Rather sugar is a composition of elements, for sucrose (common table sugar) that is 12 Carbon atoms, 22 Hydrogen atoms, and 11 Oxygen atoms, or C12H22O11.
It is an element. Elements are composed of atoms, and atoms of elements combine chemically to form compounds.
Yes, atoms make up almost everything, they can only be broken down into protons, neutrons and electrons. An element is a substance found on the periodic table with certain rules and regulations given to each element. An element is made up only of atoms. A compound is a mixture of two or more elements that can be broken down into elements again, it is not a pure substance as such. So a compound is made up of elements, elements are made of atoms.
Carbon is the only element that can form chemical bonds with itself to form long stable chains, such as in organic molecules. This ability is due to carbon's unique ability to form multiple covalent bonds with other atoms, including other carbon atoms, allowing for the formation of a wide variety of complex and diverse compounds.
Yes. Xenon is noble gas with stable electronic configuration. It does not combine with other elements or itself under STP and exists as single atoms (mono atomic).
Atoms are related to elements because atoms are what comprise elements. An atom still has atoms no matter what state it is in.
Unless it is an element that has a full valence shell naturally - like neon, krypton, etc. - atoms are incredibly unstable. When a compound is formed the atoms either share or exchange electrons in order to completely fill their valence shells. Unless it is an element that has a full valence shell naturally - like neon, krypton, etc. - atoms are incredibly unstable. When a compound is formed the atoms either share or exchange electrons in order to completely fill their valence shells.
Atoms do have the same properties as long as stable form of its corresponding element is not a molecule. For example H1 (Hydrogen) which is a single atom has the same properties that of Hydrogen as it doesn't require to be in a molecular form to be stable. On the other hand O1 (Oxygen) doesn't have the same properties as Oxygen that we breathe as that Oxygen is actually O2 which is actually necessary for it to remain stable.