For example a sulfenate.
It is in no way organic.
Ribonucleic acid is organic. The rest are inorganic
No its not a salt but a weak organic acid having chemical formula CH3COOH
In organic chemistry, an allenoate is a salt or ester of an allenoic acid.
The equation involves a neutralization reaction between an organic acid and a base. The general equation is: Organic acid + base -> salt + water. For example, when acetic acid (CH3COOH) reacts with sodium hydroxide (NaOH), the equation is: CH3COOH + NaOH -> CH3COONa + H2O.
yes, the bioproducts are water and a salt.
Ester
Ca-tartrate (2,3-Dihydroxybutanedioic acid calcium salt, CaC4H4O6) is the Ca-salt of a diprotic acid. That is the IN-organic part of the story. The ORganic part is the tartaric acid (2,3-Dihydroxybutanedioic acid, H2C4H4O6) of which it is formed eg. as a product 'defect' in grape wine making proces. Structural formula: (COOH)-CHOH-CHOH-(COOH)
You think probable to thioesters.
an organic molecule created by chemically altering an acid or base
Bases and acids can react to form salt and water through a chemical reaction called neutralization. In this reaction, the hydrogen ions from the acid combine with the hydroxide ions from the base to form water, while the positively charged ion from the base and the negatively charged ion from the acid combine to form a salt.
A pyruvate is the salt of pyruvic acid, an organic acid, so yes.