The physical properties of a compound may be entirely different from the physical properties of the elements from which the compound is made.
A compound that has the same properties as the elements that formed it is called a pure substance. Each element retains its chemical properties within the compound, but the compound itself may have different physical and chemical properties compared to its individual elements.
It is an element. It is in the d block. It is a precious metal.
The atomic number and mass number of an element never change when it becomes part of a compound. These values are unique to each element and are constant regardless of its chemical state.
No, the ability of an element to form a compound with chlorine is a chemical property. It describes how an element interacts with another substance (chlorine in this case) to form a new compound with different properties than the original elements.
Boron is an element, not a compound. It is a chemical element with the symbol B and atomic number 5, characterized by its unique properties and behavior as a single element on the periodic table.
The number of neutrons is different; the differences between physical properties exists but are extremely small.
The physical properties of a pure substance can be used to identify it. A pure substance is an element or a compound, not a mixture.
What is the question exactly? If it is about Uranium having physical and/or chemical properties, the answer is that it has both. Every single element and compound in this universe has both physical and chemical properties.
No, the properties of a compound are different from the properties of the individual elements it is composed of. Compounds have unique physical and chemical properties that are distinct from those of their constituent elements.
A compound that has the same properties as the elements that formed it is called a pure substance. Each element retains its chemical properties within the compound, but the compound itself may have different physical and chemical properties compared to its individual elements.
element, compound, etc?
The state of matter of a element or compound is linked to its melting and boiling points which are both physical properties. Also if the element/compound is a solid you could say physical properties on the type of structure it would form
It is an element. It is in the d block. It is a precious metal.
What is the question exactly? If it is about Uranium having physical and/or chemical properties, the answer is that it has both. Every single element and compound in this universe has both physical and chemical properties.
a pure substance. :)
The atomic number and mass number of an element never change when it becomes part of a compound. These values are unique to each element and are constant regardless of its chemical state.
A molecule is the smallest part of a compound that still retains the properties of said compound. As the atom is the smallest particle of an element into which it can be divided and still retain all the properties of that element, the molecule is the atom's analog for a compound.