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13 November, 18:39

One atom of silicon can properly be combined in a compound with

A. four atoms of calcium.

B. one atom of chlorine.

C. two atoms of oxygen.

D. three atoms of hydrogen.

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  1. 13 November, 21:04
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    C. two atoms of oxygen.

    Explanation:

    Step 1: Data given

    Silicon has 14 electrons

    Silicon is part of Group IV, all the elements there have 4 valence electrons.

    It can form a compound when 4 valence electrons bind with the 4 valence elctrons of silicon

    A. four atoms of calcium.

    Calcium has 2 valence elctrons. 4 atoms of calcium cannot bind on 1 atom of silicon since there are only 4 valence electrons.

    B. one atom of chlorine.

    1 atom of chlorine has 7 valence electrons. Chlorine can bind with an atom with 1 valence electron. Since silicon has 4 valence electrons, they will not bind.

    Silicon can bind with 4 atoms of chlorine to form SiCl4

    C. two atoms of oxygen.

    Oxygen has 6 valence electrons, this means oxygen can bind with an element with 2 valence electrons.

    Since silicon has 4 valence electrons, it can bind with 2 atoms of oxygen to form SiO2 (silicon dioxide).

    D. three atoms of hydrogen.

    Hydrogen has 1 valence electron. 1 hydrogen atom can bind with an element that has 7 valence electrons.

    Three atoms of hydrogen can bind with an element that has 5 valence electrons.

    Silicon will not bind with 3 atoms of hydrogen (but can bind with 4 atoms of hydrogen)
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