compound

(noun)

when two or more different atoms are held together by a covalent bond. All compounds are molecules but not all molecules are compounds.

Related Terms

  • covalent
  • mixture
  • molecule
  • chemical bond
  • molecular geometry
  • substance
  • element
  • isomer
  • Aluminum, iron, copper, gold, mer

(noun)

A substance made from two or more elements. Consists of a fixed ratio of chemically bonded atoms. Has unique properties that are different from the properties of its individual elements.

Related Terms

  • covalent
  • mixture
  • molecule
  • chemical bond
  • molecular geometry
  • substance
  • element
  • isomer
  • Aluminum, iron, copper, gold, mer

Examples of compound in the following topics:

  • Naming Organic Compounds

    • The increasingly large number of organic compounds identified with each passing day, together with the fact that many of these compounds are isomers of other compounds, requires that a systematic nomenclature system be developed.
    • Just as each distinct compound has a unique molecular structure which can be designated by a structural formula, each compound must be given a characteristic and unique name.
    • As organic chemistry grew and developed, many compounds were given trivial names, which are now commonly used and recognized.
    • Second, it should identify and locate any functional groups present in the compound.
    • A suffix or other element(s) designating functional groups that may be present in the compound.
  • Naming Molecular Compounds

    • Molecular compounds are named using a systematic approach of prefixes to indicate the number of each element present in the compound.
    • Molecular compounds are made when two or more elements share electrons in a covalent bond to connect the elements.
    • Typically, non-metals tend to share electrons, make covalent bonds, and thus, form molecular compounds.
    • Remove the ending of the second element, and add "ide" just like in ionic compounds.
    • This video explains how to use a chemical name to write the formula for that compound.
  • Halogen Compounds

    • The halogens form many compounds with metals.
    • These include highly ionic compounds such as sodium chloride, monomeric covalent compounds such as uranium hexafluoride, and polymeric covalent compounds such as palladium chloride.
    • Many synthetic organic compounds, such as plastic polymers, as well as a few natural organic compounds, contain halogen atoms; these are known as halogenated compounds, or organic halides.
    • Polyhalogenated compounds are industrially created compounds substituted with multiple halogens.
    • Polyhalogenated compounds include the much publicized PCBs, PBDEs, and PFCs, as well as numerous other compounds.
  • Properties of Aromatic Compounds

    • Aromatic compounds are ring structures with delocalized $\pi$ electron density that imparts unusual stability.
    • Aromatic compounds are generally nonpolar and immiscible with water.
    • As they are often unreactive, they are useful as solvents for other nonpolar compounds.
    • Due to their high ratio of carbon to hydrogen, aromatic compounds are characterized by a sooty yellow flame.
    • Aromatic compounds are produced from a variety of sources, including petroleum and coal tar.
  • Percent Composition of Compounds

    • The percent composition (by mass) of a compound can be calculated by dividing the mass of each element by the total mass of the compound.
    • Another convenient way to describe atomic composition is to examine the percent composition of a compound by mass.
    • Percent composition is calculated from a molecular formula by dividing the mass of a single element in one mole of a compound by the mass of one mole of the entire compound.
    • This video shows how to calculate the percent composition of a compound.
    • Translate between a molecular formula of a compound and its percent composition by mass
  • Comparison between Covalent and Ionic Compounds

    • Compounds are defined as substances containing two or more different chemical elements.
    • Some examples of compounds with ionic bonding include NaCl, KI, MgCl2.
    • At room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure, covalent compounds may exist as a solid, a liquid, or a gas, whereas ionic compounds exist only as solids.
    • Although solid ionic compounds do not conduct electricity because there are no free mobile ions or electrons, ionic compounds dissolved in water make an electrically conductive solution.
    • Ionic compounds exist in stable crystalline structures.
  • Formulas of Ionic Compounds

    • The complete formula for an ionic compound can be determined by satisfying two conditions:
    • Two chloride ions were needed in the final compound because calcium had a 2+ charge.
    • Hydroxide is a compound made of oxygen and hydrogen that have been bound together.
    • Cation and Anion Formation - Ionic Compounds Part 2 - YouTube
    • Generate the empirical formula of an ionic compound given its molecular constituents.
  • Functional Groups

    • In organic chemistry, a functional group is a specific group of atoms or bonds within a compound that is responsible for the characteristic chemical reactions of that compound.
    • Functional groups also play an important part in organic compound nomenclature; combining the names of the functional groups with the names of the parent alkanes provides a way to distinguish compounds.
    • Often, compounds are functionalized with specific groups for a specific chemical reaction.
    • Functionalization refers to the addition of functional groups to a compound by chemical synthesis.
    • Through routine synthesis methods, any kind of organic compound can be attached to the surface.
  • Compounds Having Two or More Chiral Centers

    • The Chinese shrub Ma Huang (Ephedra vulgaris) contains two physiologically active compounds ephedrine and pseudoephedrine.
    • Both compounds are stereoisomers of 2-methylamino-1-phenyl-1-propanol, and both are optically active, one being levorotatory and the other dextrorotatory.
    • Since the properties of these compounds (see below) are significantly different, they cannot be enantiomers.
    • Since these two compounds are optically active, each must have an enantiomer.
  • Nucleophilicity of Phosphorus Compounds

    • The nucleophilicity of trivalent phosphorus results in rapid formation of phosphonium salts when such compounds are treated with reactive alkyl halides.
    • For example, although resonance delocalization of the nitrogen electron pair in triphenylamine, (C6H5)3N, renders it relatively unreactive in SN2 reactions, the corresponding phosphorus compound, triphenylphosphine, undergoes a rapid and exothermic reaction to give a phosphonium salt, as shown below in the first equation.
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