Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, ammonia, carbon monoxide, calcium phosphate etc
No. No molecule is inorganic.
Sulfuric acid is an inorganic molecule.
An inorganic molecule is any molecule that does not contain carbon.
Only sodium chloride is an inorganic compound.
Polarity of a molecule is not related to whether or not a molecule is organic or inorganic. A polar molecule is a molecule that has a slightly negative charge on one portion and a slightly positive charge on another portion; a nonpolar molecule is a molecule that is balanced and neutral throughout. An example of a polar inorganic molecule is water (H2O) - there is a slight positive charge on each of the hydrogen atoms and a slight negative charge on the oxygen atom. An example of a nonpolar inorganic molecule is carbon dioxide (CO2) - this molecule is neutral throughout. An example of a polar organic molecule is isopropyl alcohol (rubbing alcohol) - there is a slight negative charge around the hydroxyl group. An example of a nonpolar organic molecule is octane (one of the components of gasoline) - this molecule is neutral throughout.
inorganic
it is inorganic
An organic molecule contains carbon, whereas an inorganic molecule does not
no. organic molecule
it is inorganic molecule
It is organic if the molecule contains carbon-hydrogen bonds. If none of these bonds are present in the molecule, it is inorganic.
Rain is water, and water is an inorganic molecule.