I think these are right. I don't know too much but this is what I'm thinking...........
1.) Pentane
1a.) C-C-C-C-C
2.) 2-methyl butane
2a.) C-C-C-C
--------C
3.) 2,2-methyl propane
-------C
3.) C-C-C
-------C
Ignore the "-"'s. That's the only way I could figure out how to line the C's up lol.
I hope that's right and helps ;)
Isopentane is an isomer of pentane. Pentane, also called n-pentane or normal pentane, is a straight-chain alkane with 5 carbons in a row. Isopentane has 2 methyl groups on the C2 carbon; it is a 4-carbon straight chain alkane with a methyl group on the C2 carbon.
H h h h h
h-c-c-c-c-c-h
h h h h h
do not forget the bonds on the top hydrogens it did not let me put them in . This doesn't mean you should to.
If you mean what is an isomer then it is a compound with the same chemical formula but with a different structure
pentane insolube
trans isomers
2-Methylpentane is a branched-chain alkane. It is a structural isomer of hexane composed of a methyl group bonded to the second carbon atom in a pentane chain. The structural formula is C6H14.
It's a better representation of its molecular structure and helps to distinguish it from its isomer methyl formate HCOOCH3.
Three: pentane, 2-methylbutane (isopentane), and 2,2-dimethylpropane (neopentane).
The IUPAC name for pentane is pentane. Pentane is a saturated chain of five carbon (C) atoms with the formula C5H12. Specifically, using the IUPAC name, pentane refers to the n-pentane isomer.
pentane has five carbons
If you mean what is an isomer then it is a compound with the same chemical formula but with a different structure
senetence according to the instructor
Pentane is the name in the IUPAC system
pentane
No, it is NOT either both. Besides 'benzenepropanol' is not an official name.
No. An isomer has the same formula but a different structure in some way.
Pentane is C5H12 The Structure is as follows. CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3
Pentane
Pentane