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