Talk:Chemical compound

Latest comment: 1 month ago by NeedsCorrection in topic "Many" identical molecules?

Naming

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What about naming chemical compounds? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.36.61.40 (talkcontribs) 02:11, 20 December 2005 (UTC)

Someone needs to add a chart of some kind about naming the compounds. I can produce it if no one feels up to it TheSun 00:03, 29 August 2006 (UTC)Reply
How can one group of compounds have so many functions????
Each compound has it uses. --Chemicalinterest (talk) 00:41, 8 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

cool —Preceding unsigned comment added by 220.233.152.229 (talk) 02:55, 1 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

Purity

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Re: Dwarf King's entry about a compound being the most complex pure substance. I reworded his statement to hopefully make it more clear, but I'm not sure it's strictly correct, and I'm not sure it belongs in the article. In truth, I think some fleshing out might make it obviously worthy, but am not currently clear on just how to state it. The validity of the comment depends on the definition of 'purity' and so perhaps it doesn't belong. Be bold! Catbar (Brian Rock) 03:48, 22 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

A compound IS a pure substance. The chemical definition of purity is that which consists of only 1 kind of representative particle, and a representative particle doesn't have to be a single atom. While a molecule has more than 1 atom (and of course a compound molecule has atoms of different atomic numbers), they share common valence electron orbitals. Therefore, a molecule is a single representative particle. The Mysterious El Willstro (talk) 01:05, 26 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Definition of a chemical compound

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"... two or more elements chemically-bonded together in a fixed proportion by mass"

shouldn't the definition of a chemical compound rather be based on stoichiometry than on mass?

The substitution of one isotope for another one won't change the chemistry but certainly the mass proportion, so I think a definition based on mass is completely out of the reason. 130.238.197.120 11:56, 18 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

I agree. Carl Kenner 14:34, 29 October 2007 (UTC)Reply
==== H2, S8, N2, O3 are not compounds? What nonsense. Put in a DEFINITIVE reference to this silly claim. Hmph! :)
--I have removed
Not all molecules are compounds. A diatomic molecule of hydrogen, represented by H2, is homonuclear — made of atoms of only one element, so is not regarded as a compound.
Compounds are pure substances that contain two or more elements combined in a definite fixed proportion. this is not true
---because I believe it is wrong. I believe "chemical compound" is, BY DEFINITION, a substance which can not be further separated into constituents by physical means without breaking (or making) of covalent bonds. This definition obviously will have difficulties with isotopes, high polymers and ionic compounds. It is pragmatic and only serves a useful purpose in a limited number of contexts. Let us say it is an emergent property, rather than a fundamental property of a material.-------- on further consideration, this whole article is horrible. The definition is WRONG. Its is a feeble attempt to give a precise definition to a fuzzy concept. The problem is, doing so changes the nature of the concept. Some fuzzy concepts should remain so, their utility is severly degraded when cetain types try to steal a term and assign a more formal meaning (definition) to it.--
(NOTE: I've restored the above revision... which was never signed... to its original wording and format to clarify its meaning and to restore the talk page a little closer to its "pre-vandalized" state. I've also indented to clarify where each new entry in this section begins. -- edi(talk) 21:36, 17 April 2009 (UTC))Reply
This has already been addressed in the article, but just for the sake of future discussion, here are some references that I consider pretty "definitive". Chemical compound(s) =
  1. a substance that contains "two types of atoms in fixed proportions" -- General Chemistry, 4th Edition. Hill, Petrucci, McCreary, & Perry. Pearson/Prentice Hall. 2005. p. 6.
  2. "a substance with constant composition that can be broken down into elements by chemical processes" [book's emphasis] -- Chemistry, 7th Edition. Zumdahl & Zumdahl. Houghton Mifflin Co. 2007. p. 27.
  3. "substances composed of two or more elements; they contain two or more kinds of atoms" -- Chemistry: The Central Science, 11th Edition/AP* Edition. Brown, LeMay, Bursten, & Murphy. Pearson/Prentice Hall. 2009. pp. 5-6.
  4. "substances that can be separated into simpler substances only by chemical means" -- Chemistry, 1st Edition. Wilbraham, Staley, Matta, & Waterman. Prentice Hall. 2002. p. 36.
  5. "a pure substance consisting fv cof two or more different elements in a fixed ratio" -- General Chemistry, 6th Edition. Whitten, Davis, & Peck. Saunders College Publishing. 2000. p. 15.
  6. "a pure substance composed of two or more elements whose composition is constant" -- Random House Dictionary. "Compound" Random House, Inc. 2009.
  7. "A pure, macroscopically homogeneous substance consisting of atoms or ions of two or more different elements in definite proportions that cannot be separated by physical means" -- American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. "Compound". Houghton Mifflin Company. 2006.
  8. "A union of two or more ingredients in definite proportions by weight, so combined as to form a distinct substance" -- Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary. "Compound". MICRA, Inc. 1998.
(NOTE: The chemistry textbooks listed above are books that I own. The general dictionary references were gathered from dictionary.com on 18 April 2009.)
It seems apparent to me that the general consensus definitely supports the idea that a compound must contain two or more elements. The few definitions that don't specifically mention this point (only Zumdahl and Wilbraham in the list above) also don't by any means rule out the idea that the compounds contain two or more elements. In fact,Zumdahl and Wilbraham strongly imply that such is the case; otherwise, how could it be "broken down into elements" (Zumdahl)? (Wilbraham's "separated into simpler substances" is slightly more vague, but seriously... what else could it really mean?)
The article does currently read "Chemical compounds are pure chemical substances consisting of two or more different chemical elements...", and that's great. But the statement is unsourced, so I'm going to attach the Hill, Brown, and Whitten books as references, leave this information here, and hope that the controversy doesn't arise again. Crossing my fingers... :) -- edi(talk) 15:43, 18 April 2009 (UTC)Reply
What is essential to the meaning of chemical compound? The listed sources don't all mention different chemical elements. It seems to me that everyone might be more or less satisfied if the definition simply removed the qualifier, "different". If someone can locate the IUPAC definition then I would go with that; otherwise, my intuition says that Ozone (OO2) is a chemical compound. It is, after all, formed by the chemical bonding of two subunits -- one being the molecule O2 (itself a compound of O and O), and the other being a single atom of O. To exclude molecules such as H2, N2, O2, and OO2 seems arbitrary. What value does the distinction have? Why would the definition of chemical compound require this distinction? Is this distinction essential to the meaning of chemical compound? --NoahSpurrier (talk) 14:44, 24 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

Types of bonds

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"The atoms in the molecule can be held together by bonds, covalent bonds or ionic bonds."

This originially was "...by no bonds,..." which also doesn't make sense. It's been a while since I took a chemistry class, but I thought there were three types of bonds: hydrogen bonds, covalent bonds, and ionic bonds. Can someone in the know please decipher what it should be? --Wizard191 (talk) 13:57, 14 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

compounds are formed during a chemical reaction of two or more elements or two or more types of atoms. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.188.201.90 (talk) 20:47, 19 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Vandalism

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I came here and noticed many instances of vandalism. ive proposed it be semi protected. i question the appropriateness of the section called "Elementary concepts", it doesnt seem like it fits here, is unrefed, and unfortunately was added by a questionable new user.Mercurywoodrose (talk) 15:36, 7 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

Elementary Concepts

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FTA: "Elements in a compound cannot be separated by physical methods." Isn't electrolysis a physical method of decomposing a substance ?

Removed - there are many (non-easy) ways of decomposing a solid into elements, for example by irradiating it with high-energy particles. Materialscientist (talk) 12:09, 1 April 2011 (UTC)Reply

Chemical compounds have a unique and defined chemical structure; they consist of a fixed ratio of atoms? Say what?

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If you go to chemical substance it says much the same thing. The problem is that this is true only part of the time (i.e. for only some types of compounds). Yes, some chemical substances and chemical compounds have fixed ratios of atoms held together by chemical bonds, but others do not, and yet are clearly NOT just mixtures. Atoms in a sample of matter may all be held together by ionic or covalent bonds, but they don't need to have (in fact usually do not have) neat empirical formulas you can write down on a bottle label. Most of the mantle and crust of our planet is such stuff--for example, the plagioclase feldspars which don't have clearly defined stoichiometry. These articles are all confused. The chemical compound article refers to chemical substances, and vice versa. We need to make it clear that whole-number stoichiometry sometimes happens, but usually it is just an ideal. Fixed ratios of atoms are the exception in nature, not the rule. SBHarris 06:43, 26 February 2012 (UTC)Reply

Depends. Let's take binaries. In my practice, simple solids which can be made into nearly perfect crystals (say, proper quality III-V and I-VII materials like GaAs, NaCl, maybe SiC) are well stoichiometric, with deviations on the ppm level. Indeed, there are many classes which are intrinsically non-stoichiometric (borides, carbides, most II-VI compounds, etc.), but it is tricky to compare their significance - by production volume, abundance, importance? Nature is a poor reference because synthesis is much cleaner and more homogeneous in the lab. Materialscientist (talk) 07:20, 26 February 2012 (UTC)Reply
But what other reference can we make but nature? This is not an article about chemical compounds and substanes one is likely to find in the lab-- it is about chemical compounds and substances, period. The definition it gives, should cover and include chemical subtances and compounds one encounters in nature and the world. We describe for the student what he or she will see. Q. what is the the nature of these chemical substances one finds in observing the world? Well, mostly what one finds, are not what is described in these articles! Air and water and (some of) biology, yes. The rest of the universe (a rather larger place), no! There is no point in inserting any artificial limitation here. The Wiki describes water and table salt, yawn. For dirt and rock and all the things my house, clothes, and computer is composed of, it does not. Indeed, it's hard to say that even my own body solids are more stoichiometric than not. Is my hair or any other of the chemical molecules or substances that compose my body, actually described by these articles on chemical compounds or sustances? No! They fail. SBHarris 08:30, 26 February 2012 (UTC)Reply
On nature: for many compounds we have mirror articles, one on a chemical compound and another on the mineral of the same composition. Sometimes even more, like sodium chloride, halite and salt. Materialscientist (talk) 08:38, 26 February 2012 (UTC)Reply
Sure, but for even more we do not. Why pretend? Most of our planet is not stoichiometric and has no more sure empirical formula than a "generic" histone or a starch molecule in a peach I'm eating, which might be the only ones with those methylation or branching patterns like them in the universe. This is not needed to be forced on this definition. SBHarris 08:57, 26 February 2012 (UTC)Reply
Even though quite old, and so ignorable, as a last word, @Sbharris:, @Materialscientist:, this is harmful, ill-directed, and stifling. Do we take any medications (or just chew bark)? Use any man-made material (or knock stones together for rudimentary sharp edges)? And even then, do we think deeply about our bark, or stone, or about better ways of doing things?
The ideas stated in the closing Talk entry ignore that human ability to manipulate matter, in the field of chemistry, are based, in their history of success, in man's ability to systematically and experimentally manipulate stoichiometry.
The reason that one gets a peach is stoichiometry, for goodness sake; if within the cell, if homeostatic processes did not maintain a given proportionate relation between particular regulatory proteins and the genes that they regulate, do you think that we would see any life, let alone the delightful consumable mentioned? And if the amino acids composing enzymes through which that fruit developed and matured were not in a particular stoichiometry (and structure), as dictated by its genome—again, the edible would be as imaginary as the non-stoichiometric world that this editor appears to imagine.
Fixed proportions, the fundamental distinction in the definition of this article's title term, is the difference between a superconductive material and a vial of chemical waste, between a safe and efficacious pharmaceutical and carbonaceous matter only suitable for combustion. The fundamental distinction between compound and substance is everything to chemistry, and so to life as we know it. Such ramblings as close this last Talk discussion above are a throw back to hundreds of years old natural philosophy, and would be irrelevant if not stated so confidently, by an otherwise esteemed editor. See also below. 71.201.62.200 (talk) 17:42, 2 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

A chemical compound is a substance formed from two or more chemical elements chemically united in fixed proportions

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The term "chemical compound" has a meaning, and stoichiometry is what differentiates "compound" from "substance", to whit: "A substance formed from two or more elements chemically united in fixed proportions" as states the title terms Oxfords' definition. This article needs to move from meaningless and irrelevant to serve the important role that fundamental articles at WP are meant to serve. Start here IUPAC Goldbook and here Oxford dictionary, here Merriam-Webster dictionary, and, cf. here Goldbook, on substance. Le Prof. 71.201.62.200 (talk) 16:55, 2 July 2015 (UTC)Reply

Proposed deletion

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I proposed deletion because the article has a large amount of text which is almost entirely devoid of sources. The new version should include enough sources from the beginning. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Iamaplayer33 (talkcontribs) 18:20, 23 January 2017 (UTC)Reply

Since the following editors saw fit to derail

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...what would have been a reasonable attempt to move this article, helpfully, toward resolving fundamental discrepancies between it and the most basic definitions of the title term—that is, by deleting and starting afresh—@Alansohn:, @StarryGrandma:, @Xxanthippe:, @Bduke:, @Yellow Diamond:, @99of9:, I invite you to dedicate your time and attention to resolving the issues laid out in the article tag, and in this Talk section above. Had the article been reduced to a stub, so one did not need to battle the politics of large revisions, I would have joined in again to move a short stub toward being an authoritative article. But I am not wasting time over reams of very old, unsourced, inaccurate material. You have, in your expertise, indicated the article is of value. Please, fix it, beginning with the discrepancies that have been tagged at the article top, since 2015, at least so the article reflects the basic insights of the Oxford and IUPAC sources presented above. For an outsider's perspective on the longevity of inaccurate chemistry content at Wikipedia, see this recent article by a Harvard contributor. Cheers, await your efforts. If the article becomes workable, I too will join in. But this mire, no. Le Prof Leprof 7272 (talk) 06:21, 22 February 2017 (UTC)Reply

Eh, I just know it's notable and that Deletion is not cleanup. I'm not a chemistry editor. Why don't you start if you're interested in the subject?--Yellow Diamond Δ Direct Line to the Diamonds 01:48, 23 February 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Leprof 7272: the deletion attempt failed because deletion was the wrong way to fix the problems with this article. We don't delete articles because they are badly written. We delete articles because the topic shouldn't have an article at all. A badly written article about a notable topic is best fixed by fixing it. Since you are obviously knowledgeable in this subject area and have an interest in it, I encourage you to jump in and try to fix what you can. You may find that if you start cleaning it up, others will be inspired to join you. Large revisions don't have to become political. Sometimes it helps to take the article in small chunks, perhaps one section at a time so others can see and understand what you are doing. Give it a try. We won't bite (at least we try not to).--Srleffler (talk) 01:23, 2 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

Not too bad.

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The slipperiness of the notion of compound, as regard to stoichiometry, is a result of the history of chemistry, where the discovery of the law of definite proportions and the law of multiple proportions provided convincing indirect evidence for the atomic theory long before individual atoms could be imaged. Fortunately, most of the substances involved in these discoveries were highly stoichiometric, so that the subsequent discovery and investigation of non-stoichiometric compounds served to refine the atomic theory, rather than undermining it or delaying its discovery. I think the present article expresses this situation fairly well, and is well on the way to becoming as well written as its topic deserves.CharlesHBennett (talk) 20:34, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

inadequate definition?

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In the "Definition" section it says "Any substance consisting of two or more different types of atoms (chemical elements) in a fixed proportion of its atoms (i.e., stoichiometry) can be termed a chemical compound; ...". Doesn't this definition falsely include mixtures (rather than just compounds) because it says nothing about anything being chemically bound etc., unless we assume that by "substance" we mean a pure chemical substance? Even then, it's a very indirect way of implying that a chemical compound is made up of molecular entities / bound atoms. The definition in the beginning of the lead seems more complete or at least clearer, and covers both senses of compound: one molecular entity itself, or a pure substance made up of such molecular entitities of a single species. QuoJar (talk) 18:54, 9 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Infobox

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Template:Infobox should not be used directly. Use appropriate infobox or remove it. – Finnusertop (talkcontribs) 06:31, 10 November 2020 (UTC)Reply

I've removed it and just replaced with the images themselves. Primefac (talk) 14:22, 10 November 2020 (UTC)Reply
Thank you, @Primefac:. This obvious solution just occurred to me but you beat me to it. – Finnusertop (talkcontribs) 07:22, 12 November 2020 (UTC)Reply

Propose to Edit About "The Hill System"

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Hello,

To whom it may concern, I want to request for an edit for the article on chemical compound. This article needs to be added the Hill system formula, because it is well related to the area/field of chemical compounds. The topic is about writing the chemical formulas in alphabetical order when the atoms Carbon and Hydrogen are absent.

The content I want add: The Hill System or also known as the Hill Notation is a form of writing chemical formulas idea by Edwin A. Hill. It is used to set the order of the Carbon atom as first and Hydrogen atom as the second of a chemical formula. Ex. C12H22O11 If the following chemicals are not present, the chemical formula should be written in alphabetic order. Ex. AgCNO

The citation: The Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1900, vol 22, p.478-494 - https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ja02046a005

It should be written in its own content/tab, below the "Reactions" tab.

Thank you.Danish.Asif001 (talk) 17:11, 17 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Not for groups/moieties

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Following existing article text "Pure chemical elements are generally not considered chemical compounds", can the article likewise clarify that the term doesn't apply to chemical groups/moieties? —DIV (49.186.57.131 (talk) 03:44, 6 November 2022 (UTC))Reply
Support good-faith IP editors: insist that Wikipedia's administrators adhere to Wikipedia's own policies on keeping range-blocks as a last resort, with minimal breadth and duration, in order to reduce adverse collateral effects; support more precisely targeted restrictions such as protecting only articles themselves, not associated Talk pages, or presenting pages as semi-protected, or blocking only mobile edits when accessed from designated IP ranges.

If there is a source that supports it, sure. Primefac (talk) 12:05, 7 November 2022 (UTC)Reply

Ions

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The Wikipedia article 'Helium Hydride Ion' claims it is a (chemical) compound. HeH(+) is NOT a compound, imho. I looked thru this article and could find *nothing* that prevents claims that any fragment can be a "chemical compound" whether charged, unstable or what have you. I know it is a bit 'in the weeds' but generally a chemical compound is "isolate-able". It exists for a (context relevant) length of time without immediate decomposition (in a understood or explicit environment). that is: it is stable, and is electrically neutral. I'd like to see, at least, electrical neutrality mentioned here. I'm not sure if any elementary source will include this, it's a bit more than what a layperson needs to know...98.21.212.117 (talk) 23:16, 22 May 2023 (UTC)Reply

"Many" identical molecules?

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The first sentence of the article claims a chemical compound is "composed of many identical molecules." How many is "many"? Two? A million? This article concerns a scientific concept so I think it should be written as technically as possible. 2601:646:A201:7540:3962:7966:F2F5:2851 (talk) 01:52, 20 July 2024 (UTC)Reply

I agree, this seems very important to specify. NeedsCorrection (talk) 00:32, 16 September 2024 (UTC)Reply