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Chemical element - Chemistry terminology |  | Chemical element - Chemistry terminology: Encyclopedia II - Chemical element - Chemistry terminology |  | Earlier an element or pure element was defined as a substance which "cannot be further broken down into another compound with different chemical properties" -- which should be taken to mean it consists of atoms of one element. However, due to allotropy, the isotope effect, and the confusion with the more useful term referring to the general class of atoms (irrespective of what compound it may be in), this usage is in disfavor amongst contemporary chemists, and sees restricted, mostly historical, use. This definition was motivat ...
See also:Chemical element, Chemical element - Chemistry terminology, Chemical element - Description, Chemical element - Nomenclature, Chemical element - Chemical symbols, Chemical element - Specific chemical elements, Chemical element - General chemical symbols, Chemical element - Nonelement symbols |  | | Chemical element, Chemical element - Chemical symbols, Chemical element - Chemistry terminology, Chemical element - Description, Chemical element - General chemical symbols, Chemical element - Nomenclature, Chemical element - Nonelement symbols, Chemical element - Specific chemical elements, Abundance of the chemical elements, Compound, Chemical elements named after people, Chemical elements named after places, Chemistry, Discovery of the chemical elements, Elements song, Fictional element, Periodic table, Systematic element name, Chemistry resources, Table of chemical elements |  | |
|  |  | Chemical element: Encyclopedia II - Chemical element - Chemistry terminology
Chemical element - Chemistry terminology
Earlier an element or pure element was defined as a substance which "cannot be further broken down into another compound with different chemical properties" -- which should be taken to mean it consists of atoms of one element. However, due to allotropy, the isotope effect, and the confusion with the more useful term referring to the general class of atoms (irrespective of what compound it may be in), this usage is in disfavor amongst contemporary chemists, and sees restricted, mostly historical, use. This definition was motivated by the observation that these elements could not be dissociated by chemical means into other compounds. For example, water could be converted into hydrogen and oxygen, but hydrogen and oxygen could not be further decomposed, thus "elemental". There are also many counterexamples (for example "elemental oxygen" (O2) can be decomposed by solely chemical means into oxygen ions and atoms which have drastically different chemical properties).
The remainder of this article will concern itself with the first definition.
Other related archivesAbundance of the chemical elements, As of 2005, Big Bang, Chemical elements named after people, Chemical elements named after places, Chemistry, Chemistry resources, Compound, Cyclopentadiene, Discovery of the chemical elements, Elements song, Fictional element, Hydrargyrum, International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Ionization energies of the elements, John Dalton, Latin, Latin alphabet, New World, Periodic table, Systematic element name, Table of chemical elements, Tungsten, Yttrium, alchemists, allotropy, atom, atomic mass, atomic number, benzoyl, benzyl, by atomic number, by boiling point, by density, by melting point, by name, by symbol, carbon, chemical substance, cyclohexyl, element naming controversy, ethyl, half-lives, halogen, helium, hydrogen, isotope effect, isotopes, ligand, methyl, nucleosynthesis, nucleus, official names, periodic table, phenyl, plutonium, potassium, promethium, propyl, protons, radical_(chemistry), radioactive, roman numeral, romance languages, sodium, technetium, tosyl, triflate, unified atomic mass units
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Chemistry terminology", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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