No.... organic Chemistry is the study of carbon containing compounds.
This is the organic chemistry.
This is an aspect of biochemistry.
Organic Chemistry. For non-carbon containing compounds it is INORGANIC CHemistry For the calculations, equations, physical changes, it is PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY .
You are probably referring to "organic" compounds. Organic chemistry is simply the study of carbon-containing compounds, but especially the study of carbon-hydrogen compounds, of which there are probably infinite possibilities when these two atoms are combined with other elements/radicals. This is partly because the carbon atom has a valence of 4, giving it many possibilities for bonding, and also because carbon can combine to itself to form very long chains called polymers. In any case, an organic compound is any compound that contains carbon.
The branch of chemistry that studies carbon compounds is referred to as Organic Chemistry. This branch is also called the study of life.
In general organic compounds / substances / materials contain carbon atoms bonded with other atoms and/or those related to life. It is the chemistry of carbon containing compounds. Inorganic is everything else and generally do not contain carbon (with some exceptions).
This is the chemistry of compounds containing carbon; but traditionally compounds containing carbon are considered as inorganic compounds.
carbon!
CH2O The empirical formula for carbohydrate showing the lead carbon. Organic chemistry in the study of compounds containing carbon
This is an aspect of biochemistry.
Organic chemistry- The study of compounds containing carbon Inorganic chemistry- the study of compounds containing elements other then carbon Please note, certain salts that contain carbon (e. g. carbonates or bicarbonates) are considered inorganic.
A molecule is deemed and termed to be organic if it contains Carbon and hydrogen. Methane [CH4] is the simplest example. Carbon forms chains i.e. -C-C-C-C- etc, and has room for two side branches 'to boot!' Organic chemistry is the basis for Biochemistry.
A chemical that has no carbon.
Organic Chemistry. For non-carbon containing compounds it is INORGANIC CHemistry For the calculations, equations, physical changes, it is PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY .
Organic compounds are organic in nature and consists of Carbon - Carbon covalent bond while inorganic compounds are mineral in nature and don't consist of carbon - carbon covalent bond. It's quite simple really: Organic chemistry is the chemistry of carbon compounds while inorganic chemistry is the chemistry of all the rest of the elements on the periodic table.
No, organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds and their reactions. It primarily focuses on carbon-containing compounds, although some other elements like hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and halogens are also often involved. Inorganic chemistry, on the other hand, deals with the study of all other elements and their compounds.
It is chemistry concerned with the properties and behavior of inorganic compounds. This field covers all chemical compounds except the myriad organic compounds (compounds containing C-H bonds), which are the subjects of organic chemistry.
organic chemistry- is the study of mostc arbon-containg compounds inorganic chemistry- the study of non-organic substance physical chemistry- the study of properties and changes of matter and their relation to energy analytical chemistry- the identification of the components and composition of metals biochemistry- the study of substances and process occurring in living things theoretical chemistry- the use of mathematics and computers to understand the principles behind observed chemical behavior and to design and predict the properties of new compounds