Yes, it is called hydrogen cyanide, and it is very toxic.
IONIC
hydrogen cyanide
No, it is a tri-nary compound.
It is hydrogen cynide , highly harmful and hazardous for life.
A molecule is not any kind of bond! Instead it has or contains bonds. The bonds in HCN are covalent but fairly strongly polar.
"hcn" does not occur in a proper periodic table. "HCN" is the molecular formula for a covalent compound named "hydrogen cyanide".
IONIC
hydrogen cyanide
No, it is a tri-nary compound.
A compound containing the ion cyan as: HCN, KCN, NaCN.
It is hydrogen cynide , highly harmful and hazardous for life.
Hydrocyanic acid, or hydrogen cyanide is a chemical compound with the formula HCN. It is a gas and a weak acid. HCN and it's salts including sodium cyanide (NaCN) and potassium cyanide (KCN) are extremely toxic.
A molecule is not any kind of bond! Instead it has or contains bonds. The bonds in HCN are covalent but fairly strongly polar.
This is an example of a double displacement reaction. The hydroxyl and the cyanide groups change places, meaning that the intermediate compound has to be a cyanide compound, such as HCN.
The IUPAC name is formonitrile, the common used name is hydrogen cyanide.
Hydrogen Cyanide has the chemical formula HCN.
HCN is a linear molecule.