Yes it is that kind of. Chlorine is the halogen.
An organic hydrocarbon that is mixed with hydrochloric acid yeilds a halogenated hydrocarbon. Carbon Tetrachloride is an effective solvent and was formerly used in fire extinguishers but produced Phosgene gas as a by product. Methyl Chloride and Methylene Chloride are used in industry
The only possible way is to put it into special container and hand it over to specialists who have special equipment to incinerate it. These people deal with destroying also other harmful substances.. Other ways (burning, pouring into waste, and even letting it evaporate into atmosphere) are PROHIBITED by law and pose a serious threat to ecology and nature. Really! Chloroform is one of the halogenated hydrocarbon and immiscible with water, thus extremely dangerous and harmful if wasted in standard way
chloroform is more polar than hexane. Based from the solvent polarity chart, alkyl halides (such as CHCl3) are relatively more polar than alkanes (such as hexane). Moreso, alkanes tend to be the least polar among the organic and inorganic compounds due to their hydrocarbon structure.
it is soluble in chloroform. Chloroform is nonpolar.
No, chloroform is covalent.
A halogenated hydrocarbon is a hydrocarbon in which one or more hydrogen atoms is replaced with a halogen atom such as chlorine or fluorine. One example of a halogenated hydrocarbon is trichloroethylene.
There are many halogenated solvents. Some of these include bromomethane, perfluorooctane, chloroform, halomethane, chloromethane, perfluorohexane, trihalomethane, as well as haloalkane.
No, a hydrocarbon is a compound containing C and H only, whereas halogenation is the addition of a halogen (group VII element)
yes. MCB is mono chloro benzene and has one halogen (chloro) attached to the benzene ring.
An organic hydrocarbon that is mixed with hydrochloric acid yeilds a halogenated hydrocarbon. Carbon Tetrachloride is an effective solvent and was formerly used in fire extinguishers but produced Phosgene gas as a by product. Methyl Chloride and Methylene Chloride are used in industry
Hydrocarbon derivatives include compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen atoms, but also other elements such as oxygen, nitrogen, halogens (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, iodine), sulfur, and phosphorus. Examples of hydrocarbon derivatives include alcohols, ethers, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, amines, amides, halogenated hydrocarbons (such as chloroform), thiols, and thioketones.
CFC's Chlorinated Fluorocarbons) one of the halogenated hydrocarbon subgroups are causing a considerable portion of the break down of the ozone at higher altitudes resulting in more (harmful) ultraviolet radiation from the sun penetrating the atmosphere.
The only possible way is to put it into special container and hand it over to specialists who have special equipment to incinerate it. These people deal with destroying also other harmful substances.. Other ways (burning, pouring into waste, and even letting it evaporate into atmosphere) are PROHIBITED by law and pose a serious threat to ecology and nature. Really! Chloroform is one of the halogenated hydrocarbon and immiscible with water, thus extremely dangerous and harmful if wasted in standard way
Compounds with this collection of elements are generally called halogenated alkanes, because you take a hydrocarbon and replace the hydrogens with halogens (either fluorine, chlorine, bromine, or iodine.) This specific one would be named fluorotriiodomethane.
A compound containing one or more of the halogen elements (fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine) but mainly hydrogen and carbon.
chloroform is more polar than hexane. Based from the solvent polarity chart, alkyl halides (such as CHCl3) are relatively more polar than alkanes (such as hexane). Moreso, alkanes tend to be the least polar among the organic and inorganic compounds due to their hydrocarbon structure.
Does not burn