alkane
Butane is a compound that contains carbon and hydrogen atoms.
Butane is an alkane - C4H10.
Yes, butane is a chemical compound. It is a hydrocarbon with the chemical formula C4H10, composed of four carbon atoms and ten hydrogen atoms. Butane is commonly used as a fuel for lighters and camping stoves.
The name of the compound CH3CH2CH2CH3 is butane.
Butane is homogeneous. Butane may mean n-butane, iso-butane or a mixture of the two isomers. If the sample were a mixture of the two isomers then it would be a homgeneous mixture.
BUTANE!
A simple example is butane.
four
Butane is a COMPOUND. It is a combination of hydrogen atoms and carbon atoms. Because it contains only hydrogen and carbon iti is one of the numerous 'hydrocarbon' compounds. Because the atoms are 'singly' covalently bonded, it is part of the functional group of hydrocarbons named, ALKANES.
Not really sure, but if you check some more search engines they mostly say that C4H10 is called Butane. I'm trying to find this out myself! But I think it is Butane. The compound may be tetra carbon deca-hydride
Yes, 1-butane is an aliphatic compound. Aliphatic compounds contain carbon and hydrogen atoms joined together in straight chains, branched chains, or non-aromatic rings. In the case of 1-butane, it is a straight-chain alkane with four carbon atoms bonded together.
C4H10 is the molecular formula for butane, as it represents the actual number of atoms of each element in a single molecule of the compound. The empirical formula for butane would be CH5, as it shows the simplest whole number ratio of atoms present in the compound.