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oxiden

Oxiden is the plural form of oxide in Dutch and related languages, used to refer to the chemical class of compounds containing oxygen bound to another element. In English, the standard plural is oxides. When encountered in multilingual texts, oxiden may simply be the language-specific plural form.

An oxide is a chemical compound consisting primarily of oxygen with one or more elements. The simplest

Oxides are broadly categorized as metal oxides and nonmetal oxides. They include derivatives such as peroxides

Oxides occur widely in nature as minerals and are produced industrially by oxidation of elements, calcination

Properties vary across the class. Many metal oxides are ionic solids with high melting points, while nonmetal

Uses and relevance of oxides span materials science, construction, ceramics, glassmaking, catalysis, and electronics. Environmental considerations

oxides
have
the
general
form
ExOy,
representing
elements
with
oxygen.
They
can
be
ionic,
covalent,
or
display
mixed
bonding,
and
many
oxides
show
nonstoichiometry,
meaning
the
exact
ratios
of
elements
can
vary
from
the
ideal.
and,
in
some
contexts,
superoxides,
which
have
extra
oxygen
in
their
structure.
Oxides
can
be
basic,
acidic,
or
amphoteric,
depending
on
how
they
react
with
acids
or
bases.
of
metals,
or
combustion
processes.
Common
examples
include
aluminum
oxide
(Al2O3),
iron
oxide
(Fe2O3
or
Fe3O4),
and
silicon
dioxide
(SiO2),
which
appears
as
quartz.
oxides
are
often
covalent
and
can
be
gases
or
liquids
at
room
temperature.
Some
oxides
serve
as
transparent
ceramics
or
pigments;
others
act
as
semiconductors
or
catalysts.
include
oxide
gases
such
as
nitrogen
oxides
and
sulfur
oxides
formed
during
combustion,
which
can
be
pollutants
and
precursors
to
acid
rain.