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Do you mean how is an organic compound different from an inorganic compound? If so, an organic compound has carbon, an inorganic compound does not need to have carbon.
By DEFINITION, a compound is an "Organic Compound" if it contains Carbon. Therefore ALL Organic Compounds contain Carbon.
It has carbon and hydrogen.So it a organic compound
Any organic compound MUST contain carbon. Organic chemistry is based on the chemistry of carbon compounds.
Carbon. By definition, a compound isn't "organic" unless it contains carbon.
Nitric acid is an inorganic compound; no carbon in the molecule.
Do you mean how is an organic compound different from an inorganic compound? If so, an organic compound has carbon, an inorganic compound does not need to have carbon.
No, Organic compounds are carbon atoms that's covalently bonded to a non metal, KMnO4 is inorganic compound
By DEFINITION, a compound is an "Organic Compound" if it contains Carbon. Therefore ALL Organic Compounds contain Carbon.
It has carbon and hydrogen.So it a organic compound
By DEFINITION, a compound is an "Organic Compound" if it contains Carbon. Therefore ALL Organic Compounds contain Carbon.
No; Organic chemistry is the chemistry of compounds of Carbon. If the compound includes carbon, it is organic.
it has carbon in it, and any compound with carbon is organic therefore, it is an organic molecule
No, an organic compound must have carbon.
It isn't an organic compound as to be considered organic a compound must have carbon bonded to hydrogen. Carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide only have carbon bonded to oxygen.
Without carbon a compound can neither be organic.
There is no such thing - by definition an organic compound conatins carbon.