organic
No, camphor is not conductive. It is a natural organic compound that is typically insulating and does not conduct electricity.
No, camphor does not conduct electricity. It is a type of organic compound, so it cannot ionize to conduct electricity.
No, camphor is not an ionic compound. It is a naturally occurring organic compound with covalent bonds between its atoms.
Camphor is an organic cyclic molecule, so it is covalent compound.
Yes, when camphor burns, it undergoes combustion and produces carbon dioxide (CO2) as one of the byproducts.
Sodium chloride is NaCl, an inorganic salt. Camphor is C10H16O, an organic compound, a terpenoid..
It is definitely ORGANIC m because it contains CARBON. C2H6S is the sulphur equivalent of ethanol(ethyl alcohol). It structure is CH3-CH2-S-H and is named 'Ethane-thiol'. Compare to ethanol CH3-CH2-O-H'. Exactly the same structure except that the oxygen is replaced by the sulphur atom. Also note that both oxygen and sulphur are in the same Group ; Group(6).
No, camphor is not conductive. It is a natural organic compound that is typically insulating and does not conduct electricity.
Lecithin is an organic compound.
inorganic
No, camphor does not conduct electricity. It is a type of organic compound, so it cannot ionize to conduct electricity.
there are organic acids and inorganic acids
it has an organic macrocycle and an inorganic metal at the centre
No, camphor is not an ionic compound. It is a naturally occurring organic compound with covalent bonds between its atoms.
inorganic
Inorganic
inorganic