Carbon acts in many different ways. Please specify the specific reaction you want information about.
Hydrogen gas is evolved when acids act on certain metals. For example, when hydrochloric acid acts on sodium, sodium chloride is formed as hydrogen gas escapes.
Trees absorb carbon dioxide and release oxygen - almost as if they breathed in the opposite way to humans.
KOH would act as a base to dissolved carbon dioxide's acid, yielding a neutralization reaction. Water and potassium carbonate would result. Carbon dioxide would slowly be converted to the carbonate form, removing it from solution.
There are 4 carbon atoms, which each individually act as a central atom since they are surrounded entirely by the hydrogen atoms. Each carbon forms 4 sigma bonds, therefore, each carbon atom has a hybridization state of sp^3.
By definition, an atom of an element is the smallest particle of the element that retains its chemical properties. The answer is "an atom of carbon." A group of 6 protons. It could have 6 neutrons and 6 electrons, but it does not necessarily have to. It could have a different amount of neutrons and hence a different weight (an isotope), or a different number of electrons and be electrically charged (an ion). These are all still considered to be carbon atoms and chemically act as carbon.
it rusts
Alpha clevage is the act of breaking the carbon-carbon bond adjacent to the carbon bearing a specified functional group.
Yes, deforestation removes trees that act as a carbon sink, removing and storing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This increases the greenhouse effect.
Hydrogen gas is evolved when acids act on certain metals. For example, when hydrochloric acid acts on sodium, sodium chloride is formed as hydrogen gas escapes.
acts like a chemical
What are two ways plants act as a carbon source?
Saturated fatty acids have single carbon-to-carbon bonds (which tend to act like a rigid pole) while unsaturated fatty acids have double carbon-to-carbon bonds (which can act like hinges making the molecule flexible).
Saturated fatty acids have single carbon-to-carbon bonds (which tend to act like a rigid pole) while unsaturated fatty acids have double carbon-to-carbon bonds (which can act like hinges making the molecule flexible).
Saturated fatty acids have single carbon-to-carbon bonds (which tend to act like a rigid pole) while unsaturated fatty acids have double carbon-to-carbon bonds (which can act like hinges making the molecule flexible).
Saturated fatty acids have single carbon-to-carbon bonds (which tend to act like a rigid pole) while unsaturated fatty acids have double carbon-to-carbon bonds (which can act like hinges making the molecule flexible).
Saturated fatty acids have single carbon-to-carbon bonds (which tend to act like a rigid pole) while unsaturated fatty acids have double carbon-to-carbon bonds (which can act like hinges making the molecule flexible).
Yes