Organic compounds contain carbon bonded to hydrogen. Inorganic compounds do not.
they are inorganic
All organic compounds contain carbon; most inorganic compounds doesn't contain carbon.
Basically, organic compounds have carbon. Inorganic do not.
Some exceptions for classifying organic compounds include certain inorganic compounds that contain carbon, such as carbonates and cyanides, and some organometallic compounds that contain metal atoms bonded to carbon atoms. Additionally, some compounds may exhibit properties that blur the lines between organic and inorganic classifications, such as certain metalloorganic compounds.
organic compounds have carbon - hydrogen bond. inorganic compounds do not
Inorganic compounds generally do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, while organic compounds do. Inorganic compounds are typically simpler in structure and have fewer types of elements compared to organic compounds. Additionally, organic compounds are usually associated with living organisms, while inorganic compounds are not.
H2O (water) is an inorganic compound, not an organic compound. Inorganic compounds do not contain carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bonds, which are characteristic of organic compounds.
Proteins are organic compounds.
Proteins are organic compounds.
organic compounds contain carbon bonded to hydrogen. Inorganic compounds do not.
Carbon is always present in all organic compounds, but lacking in inorganic compounds. Similarly hydrogen is always present in organic compounds but are missing in inorganic compounds.
Basically, all organic compounds have carbon and organic chemistry is the study of carbon based comounds. Inorganic generally do not contain carbon (with exceptions being carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, metal carbonates, metal bicarbonates and metal carbides).