The name of this chemical compound is Hydrogen acetate, or acetic acid.
Acetic Acid
Acetic acid, which is weak enough to put in your mouth if it is mixed as a 5% solution with water. If so, it's called vinegar.
Acetic acid
C2H4O2 can also be written HC2H3O2 which shows the acid hydrogen, or it is better known as CH3COOH, acetic acid.
That depends on what kind of vinegar you are asking about. Pure vinegar is a compound composed of Vinegar is acetic acid (HC2H3O2) but the vinegar you buy in a store is a homogeneous mixture of acetic acid and water.
An inorganic compound is any compound that does not consist of a carbon backbone. Some examples include: NaCl - sodium chloride (table salt) HC2H3O2 - hydrogen acetate, acetic acid (vinegar when ~5% solution by weight) Na2CO3 - sodium carbonate (baking soda)
It is a weak electrolyte.
Those are called 'oxy-acids' eg. HNO3 (nitric) , H2SO4 (sulfuric) , HC2H3O2 (acetic)
Structurally it is CH3-CH(=O)O^- . This is the acetate or ethanoate anion.
HC2H3O2 is acetic acid. Magnesium will react with water or acids to produce hydrogen gas.
Use equimolar quantities: LiOH + HC2H3O2 (acetic acid) --> C2H3O2- (acetate) + Li+ + H2O
Acetic Acid
5 or 15