THE WORLD OF MOLECULES
As we mentioned in Chapter 4, an atom is the smallest particle of an element.
Atoms of one element often attract each other or atoms of a different element. If
this attraction is strong enough, a chemical bond can result. Chemical bonds join
two or more atoms into units called molecules. (We’ll talk more about bonding
in Chapter 7.)
Everybody knows the formula of water—it’s H 2 O. This formula tells us that, in a
molecule of water, 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom are bonded together
into a unit. An individual water molecule is the smallest unit of water that exists.
Diatomic Molecules
When a molecule consists of just two atoms (whether they are of identical or
different elements), it’s called a diatomic molecule. Some elements exist as
diatomic molecules at room temperature and atmospheric pressure (1 atm). For
example, oxygen in air exists in the form of O 2 . There are seven important
elements that exist as diatomic molecules: oxygen (O 2 ), iodine (I 2 ), hydrogen
(H 2 ), nitrogen (N 2 ), chlorine (Cl 2 ), fluorine (F 2 ), and bromine (Br 2 ).
Elements as Diatomic
Molecules
One good way to
remember all of the
diatomic molecules is the
following mnemonic:
Oh I Have Nice
Closets For Brooms
O 2 , I 2 , H 2 , N 2 , Cl 2 , F 2 , Br 2
Formula Weights, Empirical Formulas, and Percent Composition
For the SAT Chemistry Subject Test, you’ll need to know some simple atom-
molecule math.
Formula Weight: For any molecule, we calculate the formula weight
by adding up the atomic weights of all the atoms in the molecule. It’s easy.
Take hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) as an example.