1-Chloro,2-Methyl butane
Isopentane
2-chloro-2-methylbutane
2-pentanone: 102,7 0C 3-methyl-2-butanone: 78,3 0C
By one of two methods: 1-common name (CH3COOH common name acetic acid) 2-IUPAC name according to number of carbons (CH3COOH common name acetic acid but in IUPAC called methanoic acid)
There are numerous possible constitutional isomers of bromopentane. Specifically, the bromine atom can be attached to any of the carbon atoms (although there are only three unique possibilities because the 2 end carbons are identical). So you could have:1-bromopentane (same molecule as 5-bromopentane, but lower number is used)2-bromopentane (same molecule as 4-bromopentane, but lower number is used)3-bromopentaneThen you can also have different connectivity between the carbon atoms. So pentane can either be normal pentane (5 carbons in a row), or it can be a branched structure. There are two possible branched structures for pentane: 2-methylbutane ("isopentane") and 2,2-dimethylpropane ("neopentane").For 2-methylbutane the possibilities are:1-bromo-2-methylbutane2-bromo-2-methylbutane2-bromo-3-methylbutane (bromine takes precedence and gets the lower number)1-bromo-3-methylbutaneFinally, there's only one possibility for 2,2-dimethylpropane, since the four methyl groups are equivalent and the central carbon is already bonded to four other things:1-bromo-2,2-dimethylpropane
alkaline earth metals
2-chloro-2-methylbutane
Three: pentane, 2-methylbutane (isopentane), and 2,2-dimethylpropane (neopentane).
2-pentanone: 102,7 0C 3-methyl-2-butanone: 78,3 0C
The chemical formula of methylbutane is C4H9-CH3.
The boiling point of 2-methylbutane is 28 0C.
When naming a compound, you should use the lowest numbers you can, so it should be called 1-chloro-2-methylbutane.
This compound is 2-chloro-2-methylbutane.
4 c-c bonds are present in methyl butane.
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2-chlorotoluene
the halogens