Sarahisme Posted April 26, 2005 Posted April 26, 2005 hey is a diatomic molecule a molecule containg 2 atoms of the same type or just a molcule which contains 2 atoms that can be of any type (same type or not the same type) ? Cheers sarah
PersonCube Posted April 26, 2005 Posted April 26, 2005 According to what I have been taught... very basic Chemistry... it is two atoms of the same element. The diatomics are [math] F2, I2, O2, N2, H2 [/math] etc. There are seven that I know of... I think Mr. Johnson said there are more, we (our class) is too stupid to learn about them yet. ~TehCubes (He didn't really say that, he just meant it. Rock on Mr. Johnson. xD)
BenSon Posted April 26, 2005 Posted April 26, 2005 is a diatomic molecule a molecule containg 2 atoms of the same type or just a molcule which contains 2 atoms that can be of any type (same type or not the same type) A diatomic molecule contains two atoms, A Homonuclear diatomic molecule contains two atoms of the same kind (Cl2, F2 O2, ect) A Heteronuclear diatomic molecule contains two atoms of different kinds (HCL, NO, MgO, ect) ~Scott
jdurg Posted April 26, 2005 Posted April 26, 2005 To remember the diatomic elements, just remember HONCLBRIF. That's hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O), Nitrogen (N), Chlorine (Cl), Bromine (Br), Iodine (I), and Fluorine (F). All non-noble gases and halogens exist as diatomic molecules in their elemental form.
K9-47G Posted July 12, 2005 Posted July 12, 2005 They make the shape of a 7 on the periodic table, starting with oxygen. That is how I remember them.
schlieffen Posted July 13, 2005 Posted July 13, 2005 I always use "I Bring Clay For Our New House" to remember the naturally occuring homonuclear diatomic molecules, that takes you up and over forming the 7 shape that K9-47G was mentioning And generally the term "diatomic molecule" is ambiguous, it could mean either two identical atoms or two different atoms.
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