The molecule of methane is more stable, carbon is tetravalent.
Sodium is a highly reactive element that readily forms compounds with other elements in nature. It quickly reacts with water and oxygen in the air to form compounds, such as sodium chloride (table salt) and sodium hydroxide (lye). This reactivity makes it rare to find pure sodium in its elemental form in nature.
Calcium is not a diatomic element. Nitrogen (N2), bromine (Br2), and oxygen (O2) are diatomic molecules, meaning they exist in nature as pairs of atoms bonded together. However, calcium is a metal element and does not naturally exist as a diatomic molecule.
Yes, this is essentially correct. We don't find chlorine in nature in an uncombined state, but when we make chlorine gas, it appears as the diatomic molecule Cl2.
A sulfur molecule with the elemental formula Sg does not exist. It is likely a typographical error. The atomic number of sulfur is 16, so a sulfur molecule would typically contain 8 atoms (S8) in its elemental form.
Iodine (I) does not exist as a diatomic molecule under normal conditions. While F (fluorine), Ne (neon), and H (hydrogen) exist naturally as diatomic molecules (F2, Ne2, H2), iodine typically exists as a monatomic molecule, I2.
because they have more gas in them
Numerous elements exist as diatomic molecules in nature, including hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, chlorine, bromine, fluorine, and iodine.
Oxygen can exist on its own as a diatomic molecule, O2, or it can form compounds with other elements. In nature, oxygen is commonly found in both elemental form and in various compounds.
No, blue trees do not exist in nature.
H-O-C-C=O is a molecule known as formic acid. It is likely to exist because it follows the octet rule, with each atom having a full outer shell of electrons. The oxygen atom can form a double bond with the carbon atom, allowing for stability and minimizing the overall energy of the molecule.
No.
forces exist in nature
No, there are no bugs with red blood that exist in nature.
No, C13H18O2 represents the chemical formula for a molecule containing 13 carbon atoms, 18 hydrogen atoms, and 2 oxygen atoms. It does not specify a specific molecule but rather the elements and their quantities present in a theoretical compound.
Noble gases have completely filled orbitals. Their valence orbitals are completely filled, have 8 electrons and obey octet rule (stable electronic configuration). Hence they are chemically inert (or do not react with other elements), they do generally do not form compounds and are mono atomic.
molecule
It is only an atom.