it is group 14.(non-metals)
A functional group is a group that defines the molecule.As you know the molecule in question is an alcohol then the functional group is an OH group
Vinyl Group is the CH2=CH- group in this both the carbons are sp2 hybridised
The functional group found bonded to all carbons on the chain except one in monosaccharides is the hydroxyl group (—OH). This group is characteristic of carbohydrates and contributes to the properties and reactivity of monosaccharides.
In sugars, the process of numbering carbons is carried out by starting at the end of the molecule closest to the carbonyl group (aldehyde or ketone). The carbon closest to the carbonyl group is assigned the number 1, and subsequent carbons are numbered sequentially along the carbon chain.
Carbonates of group 1 elements are soluble in water.
A simple carbohydrate with 6 carbons is aldohexose or a six-carbon aldehyde. Aldohexose is a monosaccharide that has an aldehyde group on one end.
The organic compound you are referring to is ethyl acetate. It has four carbons, an ester group (COO) and an alcohol (OH) functional group. Ethyl acetate is commonly used as a solvent in various applications.
Tells you where this element resides in the period table. tell you which group,,metallic , gas, or liquid.
You may verify the wikipedia article about the periodic table that it is 14.
6 carbons 6 carbons
The naming of sugars, or carbohydrates, typically follows the rules of organic chemistry, where the suffix "-ose" indicates a sugar. Sugars are classified based on the number of carbon atoms they contain, such as triose (3 carbons), tetrose (4 carbons), pentose (5 carbons), and hexose (6 carbons). Additionally, the structure can denote whether the sugar is an aldose (containing an aldehyde group) or a ketose (containing a ketone group), influencing the name further. For example, glucose is a hexose aldose, while fructose is a hexose ketose.
The prefixes for naming hydrocarbons are based on the number of carbon atoms in the molecule. They include: meth- (1 carbon), eth- (2 carbons), prop- (3 carbons), but- (4 carbons), pent- (5 carbons), hex- (6 carbons), hept- (7 carbons), oct- (8 carbons), non- (9 carbons), dec- (10 carbons).