CH4 (the 4 is actually a sub-script but I don't know how to produce those on my keyboard) is methane. Methane can certain be oxidised, but it doesn't produce CH4O, it produces water and carbon dioxide. You can't just add an oxygen atom to methane, it doesn't work that way.
H-C=O-H with lone pairs on the carbon and oxygen
No. CH2O is formaldehyde, which is not an acid.
These are not optical isomers they are functional group isomers a subcategory of structural isomers.
The three main types of isomers are structural isomers, geometric isomers, and enantiomers.
35.38g
31 grams CH2O (1 mole CH2O/30.026 grams)(2 mole H/1 mole CH2O)(6.022 X 1023/1 mole H) = 1.2 X 1024 atoms of hydrogen =======================
There are numerous compounds with this ratio. The simplest of them is formaldehyde with the formula CH2O. More complex molecules with more atoms but the same ratio include acetic acid (C2H4O2), lactic acid (C3H6O3), and glucose and its isomers (C6H12O6).
No. CH2O is formaldehyde, which is not an acid.
C2h4o2 is the molecular formula for CH2O.
Yes. CH2O is the molecular formula of formaldehyde, the smallest aldehyde.
Ch2o
These are not optical isomers they are functional group isomers a subcategory of structural isomers.
The three main types of isomers are structural isomers, geometric isomers, and enantiomers.
35.38g
Yes, RNA does have isomers.
31 grams CH2O (1 mole CH2O/30.026 grams)(2 mole H/1 mole CH2O)(6.022 X 1023/1 mole H) = 1.2 X 1024 atoms of hydrogen =======================
Ch2o
Ch2o