The hydrogen attached to a saturated carbon atom containing strong electron withdrawing groups in acidic form reacts with base to generate carbanion .such compounds which contain acidic CH2 group are called active methylene compounds . eg:CH3-CO-CH2-COO-C2H5 (ethyl aceto acetate
Such two compounds are Malonic ester and Acetoacetic ester.
Being very reactive these elements react quickly and form compounds.
Ethers are the least reactive class of organic compounds, moreover they are also less reactive than water
There are no common compounds of helium and probably are no compounds of helium at all, because helium is the least reactive of all elements.
I think so... but i would check the Periodic table to make sure if i were you
Curium is reactive and can form compounds with the majority of nonmetals.
yes
Being very reactive these elements react quickly and form compounds.
Ethers are the least reactive class of organic compounds, moreover they are also less reactive than water
Nitrogen gas is stable. However there are nitrogen compounds that are reactive.
Reactivity is the ability to form chemical compounds.
There is not an answer for this question. Potassium is highly reactive and forms a huge variety of compounds.
Methenyl is a hypothetical hydrocarbon radical CH, regarded as an essential residue of certain organic compounds while Methylene is a chemical species in which a carbon atom is bonded to two hydrogen atoms.
reactive
John Daniel Michaelsen has written: 'A study of methylene and its homologs and the isolation and characterization of some thiyl free radicals' -- subject(s): Methylene compounds, Radicals (Chemistry)
yes. If the metal is reactive enough then oxygen naturally forms compounds.(oxides)
Fluorine forms a very large range of compounds since it is highly reactive (actually it is the most reactive element there is). Teflon and freon are both synthetic fluorine compounds. Fluorine salts such as potassium fluoride are used in toothpaste, or to fluoridate water.
Yes. They're very reactive, with fluorine (a halogen) being the most reactive of all elements.