Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures | Class 8 Science Notes
By ConceptScroll Team · Published on 17 July 2026 · 4 min read
Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures – this guide gives you a concise, exam-ready overview of Elements, Compounds, and Mixtures from Class 8 Science, written by ConceptScroll editors and reviewed against the latest NCERT textbook.
8.3.2 Compounds
Compounds are pure substances formed when two or more elements chemically combine in fixed ratios, resulting in substances with properties different from their constituent elements. For example, water (H2O) is a compound made of hydrogen and oxygen in a 2:1 ratio. Compounds cannot be separated into elements by physical means but require chemical reactions. Sodium chloride (common salt) is a compound formed by sodium and chlorine in a 1:1 ratio. Heating sugar causes it to decompose into carbon and water, showing that sugar is a compound made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Compounds have unique properties unlike their elements. Activity 8.4 demonstrates heating sugar to observe its decomposition, and Activity 8.5 compares a mixture of iron and sulfur with the compound iron sulfide formed by heating the mixture. Iron sulfide has different properties and cannot be separated physically, confirming it as a compound.
📊 Diagram: Figures 8.11 and 8.12 show molecules of water and heating sugar; Figures 8.13 to 8.20 depict iron filings, sulfur powder, their mixture (Sample A), iron sulfide (Sample B), and tests with magnet and hydrochloric acid.
🧪 Activity: Activity 8.4: Heating sugar in a boiling tube to observe decomposition into carbon and water. Activity 8.5: Mixing iron filings and sulfur powder, heating to form iron sulfide, and comparing properties and reactions with dilute hydrochloric acid.
🔗 Connection: Leads to applications of elements, compounds, and mixtures in daily life and industry.
Frequently asked questions
Consider the following reaction where two substances, A and B, combine to form a product C: $$ \mathrm {A} + \mathrm {B} \longrightarrow \mathrm {C} $$ Assume that A and B cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical reactions. Based on this information, which of the following statements is correct? (i) A, B, and C are all compounds and only C has a fixed composition. (ii) C is a compound, and A and B have a fixed composition. (iii) A and B are compounds, and C has a fixed composition. (iv) A and B are elements, C is a compound, and has a fixed composition.
Option (iv) is correct: A and B are elements, C is a compound, and has a fixed composition.
Explanation: Since A and B cannot be broken down into simpler substances by chemical reactions, they are elements. When they combine chemically, they form a compound C which has a fixed composition. Compounds have properties different from their constituent elements and a fixed ratio of elements.
Assertion: Air is a mixture. Reason: A mixture is formed when two or more substances are mixed, without undergoing any chemical change. Choose the correct option: (i) Both Assertion and Reason are true and Reason is the correct explanation for Assertion. (ii) Both Assertion and Reason are true, but Reason is not the correct explanation for Assertion. (iii) Assertion is true, but Reason is false. (iv) Assertion is false, but Reason is true.
Option (i) is correct.
Explanation: Air is a mixture because it consists of several gases mixed physically without any chemical change. The reason correctly explains the assertion that a mixture is formed when substances are mixed without chemical change.
Water, a compound, has different properties compared to those of the elements oxygen and hydrogen from which it is formed. Justify this statement.
Water is a compound formed by chemical combination of hydrogen and oxygen in a fixed ratio (2:1). The properties of water are very different from those of hydrogen (a flammable gas) and oxygen (supports combustion). Water is a liquid at room temperature, does not support combustion, and has unique properties like high boiling point and surface tension. This difference arises because compounds have properties different from their constituent elements due to chemical bonding and new molecular stru
In which of the following cases are all the examples correctly matched? Give reasons in support of your answers. (i) Elements — water, nitrogen, iron, air. (ii) Uniform mixtures—minerals, seawater, bronze, air. (iii) Pure substances—carbon dioxide, iron, oxygen, sugar. (iv) Non-uniform mixtures — air, sand, brass, muddy water.
Correct matches: (ii) Uniform mixtures—seawater, bronze, air are correctly matched because these are homogeneous mixtures. (iii) Pure substances—carbon dioxide, iron, oxygen, sugar are correctly matched as these are pure substances (elements or compounds).
Incorrect matches: (i) Elements — water and air are not elements; water is a compound and air is a mixture. (iv) Non-uniform mixtures — air and brass are not non-uniform mixtures; air and brass are uniform mixtures.
Explanation:
- Elements a
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