Ammonia is not organic. Others are organic molecules
No. Methane is CH4 whereas ammonia is NH3.
1st ,,,,the constituents of both are different... methane is ch4 whereas ammonia is nh3 . if u want a practical difference,,,ammonia is found in fertilizers methane is found in cow dung(gobar gas).
Ammonia (NH3) has hydrogen bonding intermolecular forces, whereas methane (CH4) does not. In addition, ammonia is polar, and so also has dipole-dipole forces and methane does not. Thus, it takes more energy (higher temperature) to boil and melt ammonia than it does methane.
Yes. Methane is a molecular compound.
A hydrocarbon.
# Methane has a carbon atom, ammonia has none # Ammonia has a nitrogen atom, methane has none # Methane has a neutral static charge # Ammonia has a positive static charge # Methane is energetically stable # Ammonia is energetically unstable
No. Methane is CH4 whereas ammonia is NH3.
The shape of the methane molecule is called a tetrahedron.
When an organic molecule such as methane or ethanol undergoes complete combustion (in the presence of oxygen) it produces Carbon dioxide and water.
There is a molecule called methane; its chemical formula is CH4.
Yes, it is in a mixture of H20, Ammonia, and Methane.
Methane need not combine with anything to create a molecule. It by itself is a molecule.
1st ,,,,the constituents of both are different... methane is ch4 whereas ammonia is nh3 . if u want a practical difference,,,ammonia is found in fertilizers methane is found in cow dung(gobar gas).
Ammonia (NH3) has hydrogen bonding intermolecular forces, whereas methane (CH4) does not. In addition, ammonia is polar, and so also has dipole-dipole forces and methane does not. Thus, it takes more energy (higher temperature) to boil and melt ammonia than it does methane.
Water is H2O, ammonia is NH3, carbon dioxide is CO2 and methane is CH4.
Yes. Methane is a molecular compound.
Molecules are representative particles of a covalent (or molecular) compound. Examples: water, ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, chlorine gas, sulfur dioxide.