No, H2O is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
yes. Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons, thus electorns, thus the same chemical properties. Where isotpes differ is in the number of neutrons. Consider hydrogen, atomic number 1, atomic weight 1, 1 proton, 1 electron vs duterium, atomic number 1 atomic weight 2, 1 proton, 1 electron, 1 neutron. H2O = water D2O = heavy water
No, two atoms of the same element will have the same chemical properties because they have the same number of protons in their nucleus, which determines the element's identity. Any differences between atoms of the same element would result from isotopes, which have the same chemical properties but differ in their atomic mass.
No, certainly not. For example H2O, NaClO, CO2 etc have three atoms of different types (2, 3, 2 respectively).Only ozone O3 is a triatomic (monotyped) element
In 3 molecules of H2O, which is 3H2O, there are 6 hydrogen atoms and 3 oxygen atoms. You multiply the coefficient of 3 times the subscript of each element. When there is no subscript, it is assumed to be 1.
The subscript number after the element symbol, such as the 2 in H2O, tells how many atoms in each molecule. In the example, the 2 refers to H (hydrogen). If there is no number present, then 1 is implied. So H2O has 2 hydrogen and 1 oxygen.
An element is only made of the same type of atoms. Ex. oxygen is an element, and it is only oxygen atoms, nothing else. If there's both hydrogen and oxygen atom it is H2O, which is a compound.
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Molecules are made out of atoms, without atoms there are no molecules. Charged molecules (ions) will form compounds as elements do, by combining in whole-number ratios with the ions of other elements and compounds.
Molecules are made of atoms that are bonded together. These atoms can be the same element, such as in oxygen gas (O2), or different elements, such as in water (H2O). The bonds that hold atoms together in a molecule can be covalent, ionic, or metallic.
h20 is not an element. because it has hydrogen and oxygen in it.therfore it is a compound.
Two atoms of the element Hydrogen.
No, H2O is not an allotrope. Allotropes are different forms of the same element that exist in the same physical state but have different properties. H2O is the chemical formula for water, a compound that consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
yes. Isotopes of an element have the same number of protons, thus electorns, thus the same chemical properties. Where isotpes differ is in the number of neutrons. Consider hydrogen, atomic number 1, atomic weight 1, 1 proton, 1 electron vs duterium, atomic number 1 atomic weight 2, 1 proton, 1 electron, 1 neutron. H2O = water D2O = heavy water
Atoms in a compound are chemically bonded together in specific arrangements. The atoms can be the same element (in a molecule like O2) or different elements (in a compound like H2O). The combination of atoms in a compound determines its unique properties and chemical behavior.
Water is not an element, it is a compound. Hydrogen and oxygen are elements, but only if alone.
H2O is compound.
The chemical formula of water is H2O. It implies it is made of three atoms.