organic: methane, ethane, benzene, toluene
inorganic: sodium chloride, dioxygen, magnesium oxide, potassium chloride
Organic: sugars, carbohydrates, fatty acids, lipids, hydrocarbons etc. Inorganic: salts, all elements, oxides of carbon, oxides of nitrogen, etc
Some characteristics of organic compounds are that many are gases or solids that have low melting points and they do not conduct electricity. Some characteristics of inorganic compounds are almost all are insoluble inorganic solvents, they do form ions that can conduct electricity, and most have high melting points.
Some examples are: - Alfa Aesar - Merck Millipore - SigmaAldrich
Adenosine triphosphate, ATP, contains phosphorous.
5 characteristics of a mineral are: 1. Has to be a solid 2. Has to be inorganic 3. Has to occur in nature 4. Has to have a definite chemical composition 5. Has to have a crystalline structure
Organic: sugars, carbohydrates, fatty acids, lipids, hydrocarbons etc. Inorganic: salts, all elements, oxides of carbon, oxides of nitrogen, etc
Some characteristics of organic compounds are that many are gases or solids that have low melting points and they do not conduct electricity. Some characteristics of inorganic compounds are almost all are insoluble inorganic solvents, they do form ions that can conduct electricity, and most have high melting points.
Aluminium sulphate, Al2(SO4)3 is not organic but an inorganic salt. It occurs naturally, though it is rare.
+4 (in most inorganic compounds) and -4 or -3 (in organic compounds)
So solid compounds are generally split 3 ways, inorganic, organic and organometallic. Organic is something that consists of carbons and hydrogens, possibly among other elements, these don't include metal complexes. Organometallic encapsulate organic compounds binding metals. Exciting ones of these include transition metals, but may also contain the likes of aluminium, calcium, magnesium etc. Then inorganic chemistry doesn't have any carbon hydrogen bonds. Examples of such compounds are Sodium chloride, sulphuric acid, manganese pentacarbonyl chloride, etc
1: CO is not an element, it is a compound. 2: There are no organic elements, only organic compounds. 3: It is inorganic as an organic compound must have both carbon and hydrogen (C and H), whereas CO only has carbon and oxygen.
An organic substance (or compound) is a solid, liquid, or gas that contains carbon in it's molecules. Some examples of these would be: Carbon Dioxide, Methane, and Silver Oxide.
Some examples are: - Alfa Aesar - Merck Millipore - SigmaAldrich
give at least 3 examples of technology
Adenosine triphosphate, ATP, contains phosphorous.
Organic, inorganic, analytical, physical, and your guess is as good as mine. Biochemistry? Polymer chemistry? Surface chemistry? Theoretical chemistry? Nuclear chemistry? Depending on your bias any of those might be regarded as a subdivision of one of the Big Four or as a largely independent field of study. According to my textbook (Grade 11 Chem) they are Organic, Inorganic, Analytical, Physical and Biochemistry.
DEFINITELY Organic. because it contains carbon(C) as CH4 . Remember in chemistry #1 ; ORGANIC is the chemistry of CARBON compounds #2 ; INORGANIC is the chemistry of all other non-carbon containing compounds. #3 ; PHYSICAL the chemistry of energy , calculations, stoichiometry, reaction equations.