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atomsinmolecules

Atoms in molecules are the constituent atoms that are joined by chemical bonds to form a discrete unit called a molecule. Molecules may consist of one element (O2, N2) or multiple elements (H2O, CO2). Bonding results from atoms seeking stable electron configurations; the most common interaction in organic and many inorganic substances is covalent bonding, in which atoms share electron pairs. Other types include ionic bonds, where electrons are transferred, creating charged species that attract; metallic bonds in metals; and hydrogen bonding as an important intermolecular interaction.

Within a molecule, atoms arrange in characteristic geometries around central atoms, described by theories such as

Molecular formulas express composition (empirical and molecular formulas, e.g., H2O, CH4). Structural representations include Lewis diagrams

At the level of theory, valence bond and molecular orbital descriptions explain bonding and bonding patterns,

Understanding atoms in molecules underpins chemistry, biochemistry, and material science, linking composition and structure to properties

VSEPR,
which
relates
electron-pair
repulsion
to
bond
angles.
Bond
lengths
and
angles
depend
on
bond
order,
atom
sizes,
and
electronegativity.
The
overall
shape
of
a
molecule
influences
physical
properties
and
reactivity,
including
polarity
determined
by
the
distribution
of
electronegative
atoms.
and
ball-and-stick
or
space-filling
models.
Molecules
can
have
isomers:
same
atoms,
different
connectivity
(structural)
or
different
spatial
arrangement
(stereoisomers).
including
sigma
and
pi
bonds.
Molecules
are
dynamic
systems,
with
vibrational
and
rotational
motions
that
affect
spectra
and
reactivity.
and
behavior.