Chemical property
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The phrase "chemical property" is context-dependent, but generally refers to a material's behavior at ambient conditions (i.e. room temperature, atmospheric pressure, oxygen-bearing atmosphere). This property becomes apparent during a chemical reaction, and can only be observed by changing a substance's chemical identity. They can be contrasted with physical properties, which are less variable.
The term is used to encompass
- Electronegativity
- Ionization potential
- Flammability
- pH
- Reactivity with various chemical substances
- Heat of combustion
- Toxicity
- Stability
- Preferred oxidation state(s)
- Coordination number
- Capability to undergo a certain set of transformations e.g. molecular dissociation, chemical combination, redox reactions under certain physical conditions in the presence of another chemical substance
- Preferred types of bonds to form e.g., metallic, ionic, covalent
Chemical properties can be used for building chemical classifications.