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Chapter 4: Elements and Compounds

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    Twenty Million Dishes (and Counting) from Only Ninety Ingredients 


    We saw in the previous chapter that hydrogen and oxygen can react to form water, H2O, a reaction that unleashes considerable energy. But why is each oxygen atom satiated when it forms bonds to two hydrogen atoms? If each O-H bond formed substantially decreases potential energy, why stop at two? Why not make H3O or H4O? Because these compounds do not form (or, if they do are very short-lived) we can surmise, based on the arguments we made in the last chapter, that formation of these species would increase, not decrease, potential energy, at least relative to water. This is true, and there are some surprisingly simple guidelines that allow you to predict it.

    Our goal in this chapter is to give you the tools to recognize what compounds “make sense”. In other words, we want you to recognize that H2O is a reasonable formula for the compound formed between hydrogen and oxygen, but that H3O and H4O are not; indeed, they are offensive ideas! To do so we’ll take a closer look at the Periodic Table of the Elements; we introduced it in the last chapter, but its value in determining what compounds are reasonable - and which are not - is impossible to overstate. 

     


    Chapter 4: Elements and Compounds is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.