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Molecules that contain atoms from several elements for a compound. Examples of these compounds include hydrogen, sodium chloride, methane, and magnesium.
The fluorine. 2F - SrF2 ======the compound
Example when they two molecules of water that is 2H2O now this is a compound formed by two atoms or elements which proves that a molecule is composed of a compound that is the bonding of an atom to another atom .
Sugar is formed from molecules and these molecules contain atoms.
Halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, Bromine, and Iodine), Oxygen, Nitrogen, and Hydrogen. These are the seven naturally diatomic elements.
False: A compound whose molecules contain one boron atom and three fluorine atoms would be named "monoboron trifluoride" or simply "boron trifluoride".
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Molecules that contain atoms from several elements for a compound. Examples of these compounds include hydrogen, sodium chloride, methane, and magnesium.
Two fluorine atoms can not form a compound they simply form a [molecule]
CH3F contains no covalently bonded hydrogen atoms DIRECTLY to the Fluorine.
It is a compound. The molecules of a compound contain more than one element.
The given statement is not either true or false consistently. An ionic compound can contain atoms that are covalently bonded, as in sulfate and nitrate salts, but it need not contain any such covalently bonded atoms.
It would not be a compound. It is simply fluorine in its elemental form.
Molecules contain atoms and these atoms contain subatomic particles.
No. Boron trifluoride, monoboron trifluoride, trifluoridoboron, trifluoroborane are all valid names for th emolecule BF3
The compound name of a sulfur atom and six fluorine atoms that share electrons is Sulfur hexafluoride.
3 Fluorine atoms are required for 1 aluminum atom.