The process known as polymerisation does.
four covalent bonds with other atoms, allowing for a high degree of versatility in bonding with different elements. This property enables carbon atoms to form a wide variety of complex and stable molecules essential for life and various industries.
No, but compounds are made from atoms.
No, but compounds are made from atoms.
Every type of atom can form compounds.
The atom diagnostically associated with organic compounds is carbon. Carbon forms the backbone of organic molecules due to its ability to form strong covalent bonds with other carbon atoms and with other elements. The presence and arrangement of carbon atoms largely determine the properties and functions of organic compounds.
Carbon atoms can bond together to form single, double, and triple bonds, long chains, branched chains, and rings, which enables carbon to form so many different compounds with hydrogen, oxygen, and other atoms like phosphorus, nitrogen, and sulfur.
Molecules are composed of atoms. Atoms are to elements as molecules are to compounds.
in polymers you have covalent bonding between the atoms of C & H as both are not metals.
Amines are organic compounds that contain a nitrogen atom bonded to hydrogen atoms and/or carbon chains. They can be classified as primary, secondary, or tertiary amines based on the number of carbon groups attached to the nitrogen atom. Amines play important roles in biological processes and can be found in various natural and synthetic compounds.
Through the magic of chemistry. It's all about the many, many different ways that atoms can be linked up via chemical bonds to make chemical compounds. And because of the "flexibility" of the carbon atom, it can make long chains of complex compounds. These long chains will "up the count" of molecules. As compounds become larger aggregates of atoms, the atoms can arrange themselves in many different ways to become a different compound. Even with the same numbers of the same atoms, different arrangements, and, therefore, distinct compounds with their own unique characteristics, can be formed. The element carbon is almost miraculous in it's ability to form "chains" or other complex structures to give shape to very large, complex molecules. Far and away more compounds are formed from carbon than any other single element.
All organic molecules contain carbon atoms.
Dalton pictured compounds as collections of atoms. For example, nitrogen and oxygen might form a compound containing one atom of nitrogen and one atom of oxygen (written NO), a compound containing two atoms of nitrogen and one atom of oxygen (written N2O), or a compound containing one atom of nitrogen and two atoms of oxygen (written NO2)