No, only alkanes C4H10 and larger have isomers
It's trivially true that every compound that exists has at least one isomer. If you're asking are there any other isomers for methane, then the answer is no.
The only possible structure with that formula is methyl alcohol/methanol - CH3OH
No it doesnt
No
Moler mass of CH4O :32.05 32gof CH4O*(1molofCH4O/32.05 CH4O)*6.02*10^23
No. CH4O is molecular. Specifically it is an alcohol.
Methane monoxide
These are not optical isomers they are functional group isomers a subcategory of structural isomers.
methanol (CH4O)
Moler mass of CH4O :32.05 32gof CH4O*(1molofCH4O/32.05 CH4O)*6.02*10^23
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of CH4O. Take the number of grams and divide it by the atomic mass. Multiply by one mole for units to cancel. CH4O=32.0 grams.998 grams CH4O / (32.0 grams) =.0312 moles CH4O
No. CH4O is molecular. Specifically it is an alcohol.
First figure the molar mass for each...C2H6O=46 & CH4O=32. Together C2H6O(46)+CH4O(32)= 78 Now you take molar mass / total molar mass So C2H6O(46)/total mass (C2H6O+CH4O)78= C2H60 or ethanol=0.410 and CH4O(32)/total mass 78=CH4O or methanol=0.589
Methane monoxide
These are not optical isomers they are functional group isomers a subcategory of structural isomers.
methanol (CH4O)
3
The three main types of isomers are structural isomers, geometric isomers, and enantiomers.
For detailed information see this link.
NaCL is what compound
Yes, RNA does have isomers.