Ethyl alcohol, which is the old name for ethanol, is H3C-CH2OH
Yes they have if they are esters of Carboxylic acids. Eg: Methyl acetate has carbonyl in its middle : H3C-(C=O)-O-CH3
hydrocarbon
One version is H3C-(CH2)8-CH3 = H2C=CH-CH2-CH3 + H3C(CH3)-(CH2)3-CH3).
The simplest organic molecules are hydrocarbon chains. methane CH4, ethane H3C-CH3, Propane H3C-CH2-CH3, etc....
H3C is a part of the larger compound H3C-CH2-O-CH3, which is ethyl methyl ether, also known as methoxyethane.
H3C is a part of the larger compound H3C-CH2-O-CH3, which is ethyl methyl ether, also known as methoxyethane.
H3c o ch3 ch3
No such compound because the 2nd C from the left has only 2 bonds, and it needs to have 4 bonds. If you mean H3C --CH2--CH2--CH3, then this compound is n-butane.
No such compound because the 2nd C from the left has only 2 bonds, and it needs to have 4 bonds. If you mean H3C --CH2--CH2--CH3, then this compound is n-butane.
ethanol
esters
H3c h3c ch3 ch3
O O O CH3-C-OH+HCl--------> CH3-C-Cl+NH3 ---------> CH3-C-NH2 O CH3-C-NH2+Br2+KOH -----------> H3C-NH2+KBr+K2CO3+H2O
Ethyl alcohol, which is the old name for ethanol, is H3C-CH2OH
butonal
2-propylpentanoic acid