No. That would result in a cabon atom having an unpaired electron. A correct molecular formula would be C6H12 or C6H14
That's not entirely true. C6H13 is indeed found in chemistry. It is known as the Hexyl-radical. It's fairly common to run into this little guy studying combustion kinetics.
B (APEX)
no
C6H14 - all akanes are hydro carbons that follow the rule CnH2n+2
C6H14 because it has a higher molar mass and is more complex
YES
c6h14
C6h14
the chemical formula C6H14 has 5 compounds
No. The empirical formula of a substance is the formula in which each atomic symbol has the lowest possible subscript that gives the correct ratio between atoms for the compound as a whole. For C6H12, the empirical formula is CH2, but for C6H14, the empirical formula is C3H7.
Yes, it does C6H14 is the saturated form called hexane.
no
yes. it is
C6H14 - all akanes are hydro carbons that follow the rule CnH2n+2
C6H14 because it has a higher molar mass and is more complex
C6h14
YES
c6h14
Because alkanes follow the formula CnH2n+2 as 6*2+2=14, we can conclude c6h14 is an alkane