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Molecular Compounds: Formulas and Nomenclature03:10

Molecular Compounds: Formulas and Nomenclature

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Molecular compounds or covalent compounds result when atoms share electrons to form covalent bonds. Since there is no electron transfer, molecular compounds do not contain ions; instead, they consist of discrete, neutral molecules. 
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The elements in group 18 are noble gases (helium, neon, argon, krypton, xenon, and radon). They earned the name “noble” because they were assumed to be nonreactive since they have filled valence shells. In 1962, Dr. Neil Bartlett at the University of British Columbia proved this assumption to be false.
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Ions - When an atom participates in a chemical reaction that results in the donation or acceptance of one or more electrons, the atom becomes positively or negatively charged. This frequently happens for most atoms to have a full valence shell. This can happen either by gaining electrons to fill a shell that is more than half-full or by giving away electrons to empty a shell that is less than half-full, thereby leaving the next smaller electron shell as the new, full valence shell. An atom with...
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A chemical symbol is an abbreviation that is used to indicate an element or an atom of an element. For example, the symbol for mercury is Hg. We use the same symbol to indicate one atom of mercury (microscopic domain) or to label a container of many atoms of the element mercury (macroscopic domain).
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Automated, High-resolution Mobile Collection System for the Nitrogen Isotopic Analysis of NOx
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Oxygen Was Almost Named Nitrogen.

Jill K Lanahan1, Theodore A Alston2

  • 1Department of Anesthesia, Harvard Medical School at the Brigham and Women's Hospital, C W N L1 Anesthesia, 75 Francis St, Boston, MA 02115.

Journal of Anesthesia History
|June 29, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

John Mayow identified a "nitro-aerial spirit" in air, crucial for respiration and combustion. This spirit, later understood as oxygen, originates from niter (potassium nitrate), the key oxidant in gunpowder.

Area of Science:

  • History of Science
  • Chemical History
  • Early Modern Science

Background:

  • John Mayow's 1674 work, Tractatus Quinque Medico-Physici, proposed a vital component of air.
Keywords:
Antoine LavoisierCarl Wilhelm ScheeleGunpowderJohn MayowJoseph PriestleyNitrogenOliver SacksOxygenPhlogiston

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  • This component, termed 'nitro-aerial spirit,' was recognized for its role in respiration and combustion.
  • The etymology links 'nitro-aerial spirit' to niter (potassium nitrate), a key ingredient in gunpowder.