its the same like there are more words than letters and combo is more than none
There are far more compounds than elements: Fewer than 200 elements and many million distinct compounds.
No, there are more elements than compounds. Elements are the building blocks of compounds, which are formed when elements combine in specific ratios. The vast majority of matter in the universe is made up of elements.
compounds are combinations of elements, thus there can be more varieties/combos
There are more non-elements than elements. Elements are substances that cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical means, while non-elements can encompass a wide range of substances such as compounds, mixtures, and other forms of matter that are not elements.
No. There are only a hundred or so naturally occurring elements from which many, millions of compounds are made. A compound is a combination of two or more elements. There are far more compounds than there are elements.
Nucleic acids would be one example of a covalent compound with more than 3 elements. Proteins have more than 3 elements as well. Many organic compounds do, it is quite common.
There are a bit more than 100 elements however there are far, far more than 100 millions compounds, each day more compounds are produced, there are a lot of compounds with unknown structure, not having official names. So the ratio is much bigger than 1 to a million
Yes, of course: There are no more than 130 elements yet known, but millions of organic compounds alone, not to mention all the inorganic compounds and probably billions of mixtures.
a compound is made up of 2 or more types of atoms . atoms are smaller. u know what im sayin. listen, chemistry ain't a bowl of lemons . u gata wrk for it brotha
sodium
Calcium is an element. There are things such as elements and compounds. Calcium is a single element. Calcium containing compounds exist also but compounds contain more than one element.
There are more non-elements than elements. Non-elements refer to everything that is not classified as an element, such as compounds, mixtures, and substances that do not fit the definition of an element.