No, they are different.
All carbohydrates have this empirical formula. CH2O
all carbohydrates have the general formula CnH2nOn hence you can know the chemical formula
CH3COO(CH2)4CH3
No, it is not
Nothing. CaCl2 is a valid formula.
In the chemical formula there should be twice the amount of hydrogen atoms than oxygen atoms and the formula should contain Carbon.Example: C6H12O6Sources: Exploring Creation with Biology 2nd edition
Carbohydrates are hydrates of carbon. Glucose have the chemical formula of C6H12O6. Carbohydrates are polymers of glucose in most cases.
Aluminum III chloride is not a valid chemical formula.
carbohydrates and lipids
Yes it is valid. The atom bomb proves that E=mc2 is valid.
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen. For example, glucose, a well know sugar, has the formula C6H12O6. All sugars are carbohydrates.
Very much organic as the carbon-hydrogen bonds tell you this. CH2O ========empirical formula for all carbohydrates and that includes all sugars.