Yes, calcium exist also in organic compounds.
No, organic molecules do not have to contain calcium. Organic molecules are compounds primarily composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Calcium is an inorganic element and is not typically found in organic molecules.
Calcium is a chemical element not a compound.
There are no compounds found in calcium. Calcium is an element.
Carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen, calcium, sodium & potassium
Calcium phosphates are inorganic compounds.
CaBr2 is an inorganic compound. It is composed of calcium (a metal) and bromine (a nonmetal), and does not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds commonly found in organic compounds.
NO!!!! CaO is Calcium Oxide, which is INORGANIC.
No, calcium chloride is not organic.It is an inorganic compound.All organic compounds contain carbon. Calcium chloride does not.This is not to say that all carbon compounds are organic. Calcium carbonate (CaCO3), for example, is inorganic. So is carbon dioxide (CO2).But methane (CH4) is organic, being the simplest member of a series of compounds (C2H6, C3H8, C4H10, and so on).
Carbon containing compounds found in living things are called organic compounds. Examples of organic compounds are carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleotides.
All living beings contain organic compounds.
No as it does not contain a carbon atom in it. All organic compounds consist of carbon atoms. That's what makes it an organic compound.
Carbon can be found in both inorganic and organic compounds. Inorganic compounds, such as carbonates and CO2, contain carbon but are not derived from living organisms. Organic compounds, on the other hand, contain carbon bonded to hydrogen and are typically derived from living organisms.