The allotropic forms of carbon, Diamond, Graphite and others have only carbon-carbon bonds
The series containing only substances with single covalent bonds is the hydrocarbons called alkanes. Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons having only single bonds between carbon atoms.
Elements are pure substances made of only one type of atom. Examples include hydrogen, oxygen, gold, and carbon.
Carbon dioxide (CO2), ethylene (C2H4), acetone (C3H6O), acetic acid (CH3COOH) are just a few.Alkenes are an entire class of molecules that contain only carbon and hydrogen and have a double bond in them (a carbon-carbon double bond).Other groups of molecules that have double bonds are ketones, which have a carbon-oxygen double bond.
Carbon-nitrogen and carbon-oxygen single bonds have lone pairs of electrons that can participate in forming coordinate covalent bonds with hydrogen atoms, while carbon-hydrogen and carbon-carbon single bonds lack available lone pairs to participate in such bonding. Therefore, compounds containing carbon-nitrogen and carbon-oxygen single bonds can form coordinate covalent bonds with hydrogen, but compounds with only carbon-hydrogen and carbon-carbon single bonds typically cannot.
Carbon can form four covalent bonds at most, such as in methane.
The series containing only substances with single covalent bonds is the hydrocarbons called alkanes. Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons having only single bonds between carbon atoms.
Elements.
Compounds made up of Carbon and hydrogen only, with only single bonds. They are known as alkanes
Butter is a type of oil made from saturated fat, which are made from hydrocarbon molecules. A hydrocarbon is a compound containing only carbon-carbon and carbon-hydrogen bonds. Both of those are covalent bonds.
single only- apex
Compounds made up of Carbon and hydrogen only, with only single bonds. They are known as alkanes
Elements are pure substances made of only one type of atom. Examples include hydrogen, oxygen, gold, and carbon.
In saturated fatty acids are there only single bonds in the carbon chain.
Carbon dioxide (CO2), ethylene (C2H4), acetone (C3H6O), acetic acid (CH3COOH) are just a few.Alkenes are an entire class of molecules that contain only carbon and hydrogen and have a double bond in them (a carbon-carbon double bond).Other groups of molecules that have double bonds are ketones, which have a carbon-oxygen double bond.
3-methyloctane is an alkane because it consists entirely of carbon-carbon single bonds. Alkanes are hydrocarbons made up of only single bonds.
Carbon-nitrogen and carbon-oxygen single bonds have lone pairs of electrons that can participate in forming coordinate covalent bonds with hydrogen atoms, while carbon-hydrogen and carbon-carbon single bonds lack available lone pairs to participate in such bonding. Therefore, compounds containing carbon-nitrogen and carbon-oxygen single bonds can form coordinate covalent bonds with hydrogen, but compounds with only carbon-hydrogen and carbon-carbon single bonds typically cannot.
Carbon can form four covalent bonds at most, such as in methane.