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We can say that this is true to some extent.We must all agree that the properties of a compound DOES depend on the elements it contains since a variation in the elements changes the properties of the compound.However, what we must remember is that the properties of the compound does NOT depend on the properties of the elements that make up the compound.A simple example is water, made of hydrogen and oxygen. Water is very different from the elements indeed.
An isomer is a molecule or compound that has the same number of atoms as another but a different structure, different physical and chemical properties. Isomers can exist because in large molecules there are several different ways you can position the same elements to make different structures.
Two or more elements can combine into a compound.
Because the proportions of the elements are different in the different compounds. They may contain the same elements, but the different proportions make them different compounds with different properties.
Two electrons can combine to form more than one chemical compound through the process of bonding with different elements. The nature of the bond and the resulting compound depends on the elements involved and the number of electrons they need to gain or lose to achieve a stable electron configuration. This can lead to the formation of multiple compounds with different chemical and physical properties.
No because the elements that make up the compounds have different properties than the compound's properties.
Compounds have different properties from the elements that make them. ... The properties of a compound depend not only on which atoms the compound contains, but also on how the atoms are arranged.
A substance that has properties different from the chemical elements in it is a chemical compound. A chemical compound is built from chemical elements that are chemically bonded together. And the "finished product" will have chemical properties that are unique to that compound, and different from the properties of the substances that make it up.
Compounds are made up of elements. There is chemical reaction. The properties are totally different in case of the compounds than that of the elements.
There is no general relationship.
There is no general relationship.
No, it is incorrect
You think probable to a chemical compound.
he properties of salts are different from the properties of elements that go into making them
We can say that this is true to some extent.We must all agree that the properties of a compound DOES depend on the elements it contains since a variation in the elements changes the properties of the compound.However, what we must remember is that the properties of the compound does NOT depend on the properties of the elements that make up the compound.A simple example is water, made of hydrogen and oxygen. Water is very different from the elements indeed.
Different samples of a compound will not have different properties, that is a characteristic of a rough mixture. Different samples of a compound will have the same properties.
Sodium is a solid substance and chlorine is gas when they form sodium chloride it is different compound and it is common salt and it is solid.