Hydrocarbons are not elements; rather, they are compounds (e.g. CH4 is methane).
I can tell you one thing for certain: hydrocarbons aren't elements. They're made of hydrogen and carbon, both of which are elements themselves.
They are built of complex hydrocarbons and trace minerals, and contain water, all of which are chemical compounds (of elements). They also need oxygen - itself an element.
they are all formed from the same elements.
hydrocarbons( carbon and hydrogen)
Hydrocarbons containing chlorine atoms are called chlorinated hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons containing fluorine atoms are called fluorinated hydrocarbons. eg> CHCl3, CHF3 etc
The elements that hydrocarbons contain are: -Hydrogen -Carbons
Hydrogen and carbon.
carbon and hydrogen
Steel, aluminium, hydrocarbons.
I can tell you one thing for certain: hydrocarbons aren't elements. They're made of hydrogen and carbon, both of which are elements themselves.
Crude oil is a mixture of compounds, mainly hydrocarbons and derivatives of hydrocarbons.
Hydrocarbons. If you're adding Oxygen, it's Sugars.
Hydrogen and carbon, of course!
Oils are examples of hydrocarbons and hence they contain carbon and hydrogen as the elements.
Gasoline and fossil fuels are hydrocarbons. Hydrocarbons are composed of the hydrogen (H), oxygen (O) and carbon (C). MTBE and ethanol components to gasoline are also hydrocarbons.
hydrocarbons hydrocarbons is a good answer but they may also contain elements other than carbon and hydrogen such as nitrogen and oxygen
simple as it may seem, Hydrogen and Carbon