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Compound

A chemical compound is a substance formed when two or more elements are chemically bonded in fixed proportions. Compounds differ from mixtures because their constituent elements are chemically combined and present in defined ratios, resulting in a substance with properties distinct from its elements.

Compounds are produced through chemical reactions that rearrange atoms to create new substances. Once formed, compounds

Chemical formulas express the composition of compounds, for example H2O, NaCl, and CO2. The law of definite

Common examples include water (H2O), sodium chloride (NaCl), carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and glucose (C6H12O6).

In contrast to elements, which consist of a single type of atom, and mixtures, which are combinations

generally
maintain
their
composition
and
can
only
be
separated
into
their
elements
or
simpler
compounds
by
chemical
changes,
such
as
decomposition
or
electrolysis.
proportions
states
that
a
given
compound
contains
its
elements
in
constant
proportions
by
mass.
Some
compounds
are
molecular,
held
together
by
covalent
bonds,
while
others
are
ionic,
composed
of
a
lattice
of
ions,
and
still
others
may
be
metallic
or
involve
more
complex
bonding.
Names
follow
systematic
conventions
(IUPAC)
that
reflect
composition
and
structure.
of
substances
not
bonded
chemically,
compounds
are
pure
substances
with
specific
chemical
formulas
and
properties.
The
study
of
compounds
encompasses
their
synthesis,
structure,
bonding,
and
reactions,
forming
a
central
part
of
chemistry
and
its
applications
in
medicine,
materials
science,
and
biology.