Chemistry, asked by farhatjabeen9235, 6 months ago

how is water different from its elements in its properties

Answers

Answered by shaluj2006
1

Answer:

For example, water is made from two atoms of hydrogen bonded to one atom of oxygen. ... Its properties, however, are unlike those of carbon, hydrogen, or oxygen. The elements calcium and chlorine combine to form the compound calcium chloride.

Answered by AkashKumar372
1

The differences are dramatic. Water is a liquid at room temperature and a solid at 0 degrees C. Elemental hydrogen and oxygen are both gases even at very cold temperatures and solids even lower. Water is polar and has strong attractive forces between water molecules and other other water molecules as well as any other polar molecule while hydrogen and oxygen molecules are non polar and have weak interactions with other molecules. Hydrogen and oxygen are also very reactive while water is quite inert in most cases.

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