Octane has 18 isomers, the 18 structures isomers of octane are:CH3(CH2)6CH3, their are uncharged molecues and electrically neutral.
Phenylhexane
66. Octane is C8H18. therefore the total number of electrons is 6*8 + 18*1
The combustion reaction of octane is:2 C8H18 + 25 O2 = 16 CO2 + 18 H2OSo, the number of oxygen molecules is 25.The isomer trimethylpentane is used as standard in octane rating: the end of the scale at 100.
20F, I think this means that it is an isomer of F with an atomic mass of 20. Based Flourine has an atomic mass of 18. So taking this into account the isomer should have the same number of protons but different number of neutrons. 20-9= 11. 20F has 11 neutrons
8 is not the answer because octane does no refer to the number of hydrogens but rather the number of carbons. c-c-c-c-c-c-c-c as you can see the number of hydrogens that would bond to the carbons is 18.-------The chemical formula of octane is C8H18, consequently the number of carbon atoms is 8.
No, it is a Molecular Compound. The Formula is C8H18; which means there are 8 atoms of Carbon and 18 Atoms of Hydrogen. These are both Nonmetals making it a Molecular Compound's.
Cheat - 2002 High Octane Cheat 1-18 was released on: USA: November 2002
66. Octane is C8H18. therefore the total number of electrons is 6*8 + 18*1
The combustion reaction of octane is:2 C8H18 + 25 O2 = 16 CO2 + 18 H2OSo, the number of oxygen molecules is 25.The isomer trimethylpentane is used as standard in octane rating: the end of the scale at 100.
To my knowledge that chemical does not exist. An 8 carbon chain is fully saturated with 18 hydrogens: (CH3)(CH2)6(CH3) This adds up to 18 hydrogens and 8 carbons. This molecule is called octane. Hope that helps.
Octane is one of the alkane group of hydrocarbons and is a major component of petrol (gasoline). Burning octane gives this chemical reaction: 2.C8H18 + 25.O2 = 16.CO2 + 18.H2O The formula shows that 1 kg of octane burns with 3.51 kg oxygen to produce 3.09 kg carbon dioxide and 1.42 kg water.
The formula for normal octane is C8H18. Its molar mass is 114.23 g mol−1 The formula for its combustion is 2C8H18 + 25O2 --> 16CO2 + 18H2O So 1 mole of octane gives 9 moles of water. One mole of water has a mass of 18 g 19.8 g of octane is 114.23/19.8 moles so its combustions gives ((114.23/19.8) x 9 x 18 ) = 934.61 g of water
20F, I think this means that it is an isomer of F with an atomic mass of 20. Based Flourine has an atomic mass of 18. So taking this into account the isomer should have the same number of protons but different number of neutrons. 20-9= 11. 20F has 11 neutrons
8 is not the answer because octane does no refer to the number of hydrogens but rather the number of carbons. c-c-c-c-c-c-c-c as you can see the number of hydrogens that would bond to the carbons is 18.-------The chemical formula of octane is C8H18, consequently the number of carbon atoms is 8.
No, it is a Molecular Compound. The Formula is C8H18; which means there are 8 atoms of Carbon and 18 Atoms of Hydrogen. These are both Nonmetals making it a Molecular Compound's.
Since its chemical formula is C8H18, it contains 8 carbon atoms and 18 hydrogen atoms.
There are 18 different isomers of "octane", i.e. C8H18. Most likely the question refers to either the straight chain n-octane or to isooctane - the octane that the "octane" rating of gasoline is based on.For n-nctane:Boiling Point: 126C (259F)Melting Point: -57C (-71F)For isooctane (2,2,4 trimethylpentane):Melting point: -107 CBoiling point: 98 CIf you are looking for one of the other 16 isomers of octane, you need to specify which one.
octane number of hydrocarbons like N-Nonane N decane cyclohexan heptane Neo Petane Mthyl hexane etc