Fire is not an alkane or any substance in particular. Fire is a reaction between a flammable substance and an oxygen. All alkanes are flammable, but there are other flammable substances as well.
In an alkane, each carbon atom is bonded to 4 hydrogen atoms. So, the number of hydrogens in an alkane can be determined by the formula 2n+2, where n is the number of carbon atoms in the alkane.
Yes. The alkane series is the series of saturated hydrocarbons with the formula CnHn+2 .
The IUPAC name for the alkane given is the systematic name assigned to the specific alkane based on its structure and number of carbon atoms.
no.all alkenes end with 'ene' .methane is not an alkene cause it does not end with 'ene'.it is an alkane cause it ends with 'ane'
3-methylhexane
Fire is not an alkane or any substance in particular. Fire is a reaction between a flammable substance and an oxygen. All alkanes are flammable, but there are other flammable substances as well.
Yes, if the alkane is cyclic and the alkene is not.
No, there are many alkanes; methane is the simplest alkane.
In an alkane, each carbon atom is bonded to 4 hydrogen atoms. So, the number of hydrogens in an alkane can be determined by the formula 2n+2, where n is the number of carbon atoms in the alkane.
No. Octane is an alkane but it has eight carbons.
Yes. The alkane series is the series of saturated hydrocarbons with the formula CnHn+2 .
The IUPAC name for the alkane given is the systematic name assigned to the specific alkane based on its structure and number of carbon atoms.
Alkane
No , it does not. Alkane react with ozone . Gil Tenne
In chemistry the cracking of a long alkane chain produces and alkane and an alkene.
no.all alkenes end with 'ene' .methane is not an alkene cause it does not end with 'ene'.it is an alkane cause it ends with 'ane'
3-methylhexane