There are many different types of bonds in the Hydrocarbon family. The most common is Alkane, where Carbon atoms link only once between other Carbon atoms. The formula for an Alkane is CnH(2n+2), where n is the number of Carbon atoms. There are also Alkenes wherein one pair of Carbon atoms have a double bond, but the rest have only single bonds. This formula is CnH(2n). Another common Hydrocarbon is the Alkyne. In an Alkyne, one pair of Carbon atoms share a triple bond. For an Alkyne, the formula is CnH[n+(n-2)]. Here are some examples. Alkane: C3H8 Alkene: C3H6 Alkyne: C3H4 The suffix of the element tells us the bonds that the Carbon atoms share. -ane: single bond, -ene: double bond, -yne: triple bond. The prefix of the element tells us how many Carbon atoms bond in this way.
The chemical formula for a hydrocarbon with five carbon atoms is C5H12.
The general chemical formula for a straight chain hydrocarbon is CnH2n+2, where "n" represents the number of carbon atoms in the chain.
The chemical formula of octane is C8H18.
The chemical formula of propane is C3H8.
The simplest hydrocarbon is methane, which has the chemical formula CH4.
The hydrocarbon ethene has a chemical formula of C2H4.
The hydrocarbon ethanol has a chemical formula of CH3CH2OH.
CH4.
A hydrocarbon chemical.
The hydrocarbon formula of the chemical ethane is C2H6.
The chemical formula for a hydrocarbon with five carbon atoms is C5H12.
Eicosane (now spelled without the e) has the formula C20H42.
Ethane ; H3CCH3 NB Methane ' CH4 Propane ; CH3CH2CH3 Butane ; CH3CH2CH2CH3 et seq.
C10H22 is the chemical formula for the hydrocarbon decane. It is an alkane as it follows the general formula CnH2n+2
Yes, C6H6 is a hydrocarbon. It is the chemical formula for benzene, which is classified as an aromatic hydrocarbon because it contains a ring structure of carbon atoms with alternating single and double bonds.
The natural gas is methane - CH4.
Yes. CH4 is the formula for methane. The simplest of all hydrocarbons.