Alcohol (or ethanol) has a hydroxyl (OH) group on the end of its carbon chain, and contains no double bonds.
Alkanes are likewise a single chain of carbon atoms joined by single bonds, but have no -OH group attached to them.
An alkane is the class of single bonded hydrocarbon molecules. An alkyl group is an alkane but is treated like a substituent. It is usually missing one hydrogen.
An example:
CH4 methane
-CH3 methyl
An alkane is a hydrocarbon containing only single bonds. An alkene is a hydrocarbon containing at least one double bond between carbon atoms.
ethane is CH3-CH3, an alkane ethylene is CH2=CH2, an alkene.
Sugaralchohol has sugar in it?
No, it is an alcohol, specifically propanol. Alkanes only contain hydrogen and oxygen.
Bromine is simple covalent and exists as diatomic molecules. There are only very weak forces between the diatomic molecules and these are easy to break.
nothing
alkane
2-butene is an alkene
Cyclopentanol is a cyclic alcohol
alkene
Alkene
It is an alkane.
Its a cycloalkene
ethane is CH3-CH3, an alkane ethylene is CH2=CH2, an alkene.
alkane, alkene, aromatic, alcohol
In chemistry, ethanol is a classified as an "alkane". It is also grouped as one of many "hydrocarbons", meaning it consists of only hydrogen and carbon atoms. It is also an "alcohol". I think ethane (alkane) and suffix of alcohol is how its name is derived.
Sugaralchohol has sugar in it?
No, it is an alcohol, specifically propanol. Alkanes only contain hydrogen and oxygen.