It differs on where the double bond is located. The number in front of the butene means what carbon number of the chain the double bond starts on. In 2 methyl 1 butene it is in between the 1 and 2 carbons and in 2 methyl 2 butene it is located between the 2 and 3 carbons on the butane chain.
The stucture of butane is different to methyl butans because the isoptopes that are latched on the neutrons. Many professionals believe it is because methyl contains differnt particles wich are ethan and methanol. This makes the structure unstable meaning it forms a different structure.
Butane is a four carbon chain. Methyl Butane is a four carbon chain, with an extra carbon attached (Five carbons total). Keep in mind IUPAC rules state the molecule should be named by the longest carbon chain. In methyl butane, the second or third carbon (It doesn't matter which carbon it gets added to, since both structures are identical) have an extra CH3.
Butane has 2 isomers:CH3CH2CH2CH3 - butaneCH3CH(CH3)CH3 - 2-methylpropane (or isobutane)
2-hexanone3-hexanone2-methyl-3-pentanone3-methyl-2-pentanone4-methyl-2-pentanone3,3-dimethyl-2-butanone
1-Chloro,2-Methyl butane
The alcohols having the formula C4H10O are four 1-butanol , 2-butanol, 2-methyl-1-propanol and 2-methyl-2-propanol.
ch3Br
Butane has 2 isomers:CH3CH2CH2CH3 - butaneCH3CH(CH3)CH3 - 2-methylpropane (or isobutane)
2-hexanone3-hexanone2-methyl-3-pentanone3-methyl-2-pentanone4-methyl-2-pentanone3,3-dimethyl-2-butanone
MTBE is composed of 75 percent butane.
The molecular formula of Butane is C4H10. It's an organic compound that is a gas at room temperature, and is highly flammable, colorless, easily liquefied. The structure of n-Butane is CH3-CH2-CH2-CH3.
4
A saturated hydrocarbon (alkane). This can mean hexane, methyl pentane, ethyl butane, dimethyl butane etc.
Only two isomers are possible 1,Butane and 2, 2-methyl propane. Not quite: "butane" has no need for a number and the second compound should be simply "2-methylpropane" or even more simply "methylpropane" since there is only one possible structure for it.
Butane is an alkane - C4H10.
1-Chloro,2-Methyl butane
Because the only force holding methyl substituted butane together is a very weak dispersion force and it is not very heavy so it pretty much wants to be a gas.
butane has four carbons
4 c-c bonds are present in methyl butane.