Generally, no, they do not.
When elements combine chemically, they form compounds with unique chemical and physical properties different from the original elements. The atoms of the elements are rearranged to create new substances with distinct characteristics. This chemical reaction results in the creation of compounds with new chemical bonds.
Yes, elements can combine to form compounds through chemical reactions. Compounds are formed when atoms of different elements are chemically bonded together in fixed ratios to create a new substance with unique properties.
No: The compounds more often have very different properties from those of the elements that form them.
Yes, compounds are chemically bonded together. Compounds are formed when two or more different elements chemically combine to form a new substance with unique properties. The bonding can involve ionic, covalent, or metallic bonds depending on the elements involved.
Compounds are composed of two or more different elements that are chemically bonded together. These elements combine in fixed ratios to form specific compounds with unique chemical and physical properties.
A mixture.
Compounds are made up of two or more different elements that are chemically bonded together. These elements combine in specific ratios to form compounds with unique properties.
No, compounds are not random combinations of elements. Compounds are formed when elements chemically bond together in specific ratios to create a new substance with unique properties. The elements combine in a structured manner based on their chemical properties and bonding tendencies.
The new substance formed when elements combine chemically is called a compound. Compounds are made up of two or more different types of elements that are chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio. This bonding results in the formation of a new substance with unique properties different from the elements that make it up.
No. When elements combine to form compounds the resulting chemical properties may be very different from those of the elements that make it. The components of a mixture are not chemically combined and retain their original properties.
Chemical reactions are what causes elements to chemically combine to form compounds.
No, compounds do not necessarily have similar properties to their uncompounded elements. Example: Hydrogen and Oxygen are both gasses at normal temperature and pressure, but their compound, dihydrogen oxide (water) is a very distinctly different substance.