bicarbonates are generally inorganic because there is no carbon-hydrogen bond in them (which is one of the criteria for a molecule to be organic)
yes. such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonates, bicarbonates and inorganic (metal) carbides.
inorganic chemistry
A mineral is defined as being inorganic.
No, they are not. Basically, all organic compounds have carbon and organic chemistry is the study of carbon based comounds. Inorganic generally do not contain carbon (with exceptions being carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, metal carbonates, metal bicarbonates and metal carbides).
bicarbonates are generally inorganic because there is no carbon-hydrogen bond in them (which is one of the criteria for a molecule to be organic)
yes. such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonates, bicarbonates and inorganic (metal) carbides.
carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide are both inorganic. So are carbonates, bicarbonates and metal carbides.
inorganic in nature
Yes, inorganic compound contain carbon such as carbon dioxide, metal carbonates, metal bicarbonates,carbon monoxide and metal carbides
Carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, carbonic acid, carbonates, and bicarbonates are inorganic.
Organic compounds are actually compounds containing carbon covalently bonded with a hydrogen. You can say carbon is the main thing here. Compounds of carbon [except oxides, carbonates, bicarbonates] are termed as organic. Water does not contain a carbon atom. So it is inorganic. Carbon dioxide is considered by chemists as inorganic, along with carbon monoxide, carbonates and bicarbonates. Nature has not distinguished compounds into inorganic and organic compounds that clearly. These compounds of carbon are just assumed to be inorganic. Also there is that one thing about carbon being covalently bonded with hydrogen in organic compounds. Due to that criteria carbon dioxide is considered inorganic. But actually there is no clear reason.
HCl is inorganic
If carbon is present, it is generally organic (with exceptions such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonates, bicarbonates and carbides which are consided to be inorganic)
If carbon is present, it is generally organic (with exceptions such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, carbonates, bicarbonates and carbides which are consided to be inorganic)
An organic compound is one where carbon is bonded to at least one hydrogen atom. In carbonates and bicarbonates the carbon is bonded to oxygen, in carbon disulphide it is bonded to sulfur.
yes carbon is a part of organic compound. but there are inorganic compounds also containing carbon (such as carbonates, bicarbonates etc).