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Organic chemistry (deals with substances containing carbon), Inorganic chemistry (deals with substances not containing carbon) Biochemistry (deals with processes in organisms)
decomposers.....
hydrocarbon
Carbohydrates, Lipids, Proteins, and Nucleic AcidsMainly carbon (C).The four macromolecules are organic compounds. And all organic are carbon-based. Inorganic are metals and do not have carbon.
organic carbon compounds derived from plants or animals. They usually contain carbon and hydrogen along. For example, carbohydrates (such as glucose: C6H12O6), proteins and palm oil. They have low melting and boiling point and insulator for electric conductivity. They able to dissolve in organic solvent (such as methanol, ether and chloroform) but not inorganic solvent ( such as water, acids and alkalis).inorganic carbon compounds derived from minerals in the Earth. Usually the carbon comes along with a non-metallic element (for instance carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide). However, it may also comes along with a metallic element (for instance sodium hydrogen carbonate). Contrary to organic carbon compounds, they dissolved in inorganic solvent but not organic solvent.You should also take note that there's also another classification of carbon compounds that is synthetic carbon compounds. As the name suggests, this group is artificially man-made compounds with carbon elements in it. For example, nylon, polyvinyl chloride (plastics).
The other name for Carbon Compounds, is Organic Compounds.
They are termed organic compounds. Compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen are called hydrocarbons and they are a subset of organic compounds.
Organic chemistry (deals with substances containing carbon), Inorganic chemistry (deals with substances not containing carbon) Biochemistry (deals with processes in organisms)
decomposers.....
Carbon Monoxide
Compounds do not get a new name when they change physical state. Carbon dioxide's name in the liquid state in just "liquid carbon dioxide"
I think you mean organic compounds.
Organic chimistry
Organic compounds
hydrocarbon
Carbon is the name of an element. It is important as an element and in chemical compounds. Pure comes in several forms, as soot, as graphite, as coal, as a diamond, as a bucky ball, or as a nanotube. Carbon comes as inorganic compounds such as Carbon dioxidegas. Most carbon comes in the form of organic compounds such as food or the clothes that you wear.
The general name we give carbon-containing complex compounds is organic compounds, and there are literally tens of millions of them. In organic chemistry, we unlock the secrets of these amazing substances. To say that the field is large is an understatement. Wikipedia has more information, and a link is provided.