http://fashr.com/node/4904
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) does contain oxygen and hydrogen atoms, like water, but its molecular structure is different. Vitamin C is a water-soluble vitamin with a different chemical composition and function than water. The molecular structure of vitamin C contains carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms but is not solely composed of oxygen and hydrogen.
Yes. Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is a molecular compound.
The molecular mass of vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is 176,1241 and the chemical formula is C6H8O6.
Vitamin C
I think it's C3H4O3.
To find the molecular formula from the empirical formula, we need to know the molar mass of the empirical formula. In this case, the empirical formula's molar mass is 88. To find the molecular formula, we divide the given molecular mass (176) by the empirical formula's molar mass (88) to get 2. This means the molecular formula of Vitamin C is twice the empirical formula, so the molecular formula is C6H8O6.
The molecular formula for cobalamin (Vitamin B12) is C 63 H 88 CoN 14 O 14 P.
c6h8o6 is the molecular formula of ascorbic acid better known as vitamin C
O=C=O is the structure of Carbon Dioxide - planar and linear.
No, not even remotely close.
Its polarity or hydrophilicity!
This is difficult to answer simply as vitamin B is actually made up of eight different vitamins (some of which have different chemical forms with different molecular structure, including both active and inactive forms). There are also seventeen other compounds that are sometimes called B vitamins.