Yes. It is called hexane because of the six carbon atoms per molecule.
No. Alkanes always have 2n+2 hydrogen atoms for every n carbon atoms. So valid examples here might be C6H14 or C5H12.
C6H12 would have to be an alkene or a cycloalkane.
No, C2H6 is an alkane.
Propene has the given molecular formula.
ETHANE
ethane.
C4H8 may be an alkene, Butene or methyl propene and may be a cycloalkane, cyclobutane or methyl cyclopropane.
c3h6-apex
C4 h8 is an alkene because it sticks to the formula of cnh2n which means that the compound isnt saturated
C4H10 is the simplest alkane formula C2H4 is the simplest alkene formula
The alkene will have 8 hydrogen atoms. It's chemical formula would be C4H8.
alkane
there cannot be a cyclic compound formed with ethene, i.e a 2 carbon compound. smallest cyclic hydrocarbon is cyclopropane (C3H6), smallest cyclic alkene is cyclopropene (C3H4), and smallest alkyne is Cyclopropene (C3H2)
C3H6 is an empirical formula for propene.
C3H6 is an empirical formula for propene.
The formula for propene is c3h6 the formula for propyne is c3h4.
This question does not make sense. However, C3H6 is the Alkene , 'propene'. The prefix use to indicate the number of carbons is 'prop'
Formula: C3H6
Formula: C3H6
C3H6 is the chemical formula of propylene and CH2 is the chemical formula of the group methylene or carbene.
The general formula for a noncyclic alkene is CnH2n, where "n" represents an integer; for a mono cyclic alkene, the general formula is CnH2n-2.
The propylene (c3H6) molecule contains a double covalent bond, so it is unsaturated.
The general formula for alkenes is 'CnH2n'. Sp for C5H10 Substituting for 'n' it becomes C5H(2(5)) = C5H10 . Hence itv is an Alkene.