measure of an element's combining capacity with other atoms when it forms chemical compounds or molecules
Valence is a measure of how many other atoms an element can combine with when forming chemical compounds or molecules. It matters because understanding valence helps predict how different elements will bond together and what kinds of compounds they can form.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
In chemistry, the valence (US spelling) or valency (British spelling) of an atom is a measure of its combining capacity with other atoms when it forms chemical compounds or molecules. Valence is generally understood to be the number of chemical bonds that each atom of a given chemical element typically forms. Double bonds are considered to be two bonds, triple bonds to be three, quadruple bonds to be four, quintuple bonds to be five and sextuple bonds to be six. In most compounds, the valence of hydrogen is 1, of oxygen is 2, of nitrogen is 3, and of carbon is 4. Valence is not to be confused with the related concepts of the coordination number, the oxidation state, or the number of valence electrons for a given atom.
Description
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).