Large organic molecules that are made up of carbon hydrogen oxygen nitrogen and phosphorus are nucleic acids.
Lipids
Compounds that contain carbon-hydrogen bonding are collectively termed organic compounds. These are simply compounds that would contain hydrogen and carbon elements.
There are tens of thousands of them. Perhaps the biggest category of such molecules are called the hydrocarbons, which are compounds of carbon and hydrogen. Another category is the organic compounds which are compounds containing carbon; most of these also contain hydrogen.
Just remember NCHOPS.Which stands for; Nitrogen, Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, and Sulfur, All organic compounds usually have C,H, and O. Most also have nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur.
Organic compounds.
You may be referring to organic compounds. All organic compounds contain carbon but all compounds that contain carbon are not necessarily organic. A more general term would be carbonaceous.
They are termed organic compounds. Compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen are called hydrocarbons and they are a subset of organic compounds.
Most of the organic molecules have good bit of number of carbons in it.An organic molecule having carbon, Hydrogen and oxygen is called ether.An organic molecule having carbon, hydrogen and Nitrogen is called amines.All organic compounds have carbon and hydrogen in them, the compound needs both carbon and hydrogen to be organic.
Hydrocarbons are organic compounds formed from hydrogen and carbon.
Molecules of only hydrogen and carbon are called hydrocarbons, and they are organic. Hydrogen is the answer.
Compounds that contain carbon-hydrogen bonding are collectively termed organic compounds. These are simply compounds that would contain hydrogen and carbon elements.
carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
There are tens of thousands of them. Perhaps the biggest category of such molecules are called the hydrocarbons, which are compounds of carbon and hydrogen. Another category is the organic compounds which are compounds containing carbon; most of these also contain hydrogen.
No. Carbohydrates are in a class of compound called organic compounds. Organic compounds have in common certain combinations of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Living things are full of them.
Yes. With the exception of carbonic acid (H2CO3), oxalic acid (H2C2O4), and their salts compounds of carbon and hydrogen are always organic.
This referes to unsaturated (organic) compounds, e.g. alkenes
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).all compounds which are having carbon and hydrogen essentially in molecular formulas are called organic compounds.These may have any other element also.eg;CH3COCH3 (Acetone)Compounds having only carbon and hydrogen are called as hydrocarbons. they are also a class of organic compounds.eg;CH4 (methane)Any other compound which donot have either of carbon& hydrogen is called as inorganic compound.eg; CO2, H2O are inorganic compounds
No, not all organisms use organic compounds for energy. Some organisms, such as certain bacteria, are capable of using inorganic compounds like hydrogen sulfide or ammonia as an energy source through a process called chemosynthesis. These organisms do not rely on organic compounds for their energy needs.