Carbon. Organic molecules are usually made up of carbon chains or rings, with hydrogen atoms bonded to most bond sites. The molecules are distinguished by the length of the chain, the number of double or triple carbon-carbon bonds, and the other elements or ligands that might be bonded to the carbon chain or ring.
Carbon is considered the backbone of organic molecules. This is because in order for a molecule to be considered organic, it must contain atoms of carbon.
Carbon forms the basis of organic molecules
Carbon, mostly double, but sometimes single-bonded.
carbon forms the backbone of organic compounds.
Carbon
carbon
usually oxygen
Sulfur is not diatomic. It forms S8 molecules rather than S2.
Carbon is the element that forms maximum number of compounds
Phosphorus occur both in organic and in organic forms . Organic forms are phytin,as its derivitives,nucleic acids, phospholipids and in microbial biomass.in organic form includes rock phosohate or phosphorite
Yes, some of the nonmetals (hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and the halogens) form diatomic molecules (H2, N2, O2, etc.). Sulfur forms S8 molecules, phosphorus can form P4 molecules, and the ever versatile element carbon can form C60 molecules among others.
Fluorine is an element that forms molecules.
Carbon
False the answer is carbon not oxygen ^_^
Carbon Atoms
polymerization
None. All elements are unique.
Diamonds are formed from carbon.
Not necessarily. Many "inorganic" molecules can be created in a lab.
Bromine is the only element that is liquid and forms diatomic molecules Br2. Mercury is also an element and is liquid but is monoatomic.
usually oxygen
uranis has the most compounds
Glycerol is a subunit molecule of a lipid. It is a three carbon alcohol that forms the backbone of most lipid molecules in the body.