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Hydrocarbon is a compound. Unsaturated hydrocarbon refers to the hydrocarbon containing at the least, a double or triple bond. Acetic acid is an example of a hydrocarbon.
The propylene (c3H6) molecule contains a double covalent bond, so it is unsaturated.
a hydrocarbon that has double bond or triple bond between two carbons
A double covalent bond, one is a socalled sigma-bond, the other is a pi-bond.
When one carbon in the hydrocarbon molecule has formed a double (or triple) bond with an adjacent carbon.
Alkenes (also known as olefenes) have double covalent bonds, descriptively a sigma bond and a pi bond.
Organic, aromatic hydrocarbon compound: CH3-C6H5
because hydrogen is make only one covalent bond
They are called the (mono) ALKENES, non-cyclo CnH2n formula
Hydrocarbon is a compound. Unsaturated hydrocarbon refers to the hydrocarbon containing at the least, a double or triple bond. Acetic acid is an example of a hydrocarbon.
No, when it is a cyclo-hydrocarbon, Yes when it is an unsaturated hydrocarbon (decene)
double covalent is stronger
The propylene (c3H6) molecule contains a double covalent bond, so it is unsaturated.
a hydrocarbon that has double bond or triple bond between two carbons
a double covalent bond is when four atoms that share two electrons.
Unsaturated hydrocarbon is the name of a type of organic molecule in organic chemistry, that contains a chain of carbons. "Unsaturated" refers to the fact that each of the carbons bonds aren't with 4 separate molecules, but can, instead have double or triple bonds.A hydrocarbon in which valencies of carbon are not satisfied by single covalent bonds are unsaturated hydrocarbons.
A covalent bond which is either double or triple covalent bond.