ammonia
Edit: NH3 is ammonia not NH2 also NH4 is ammonium. Anything with a base of Nitrogen that isn't ammonia or ammonium, is considered an amine group. These are nitrogen bonded to 2 hydrgens and something else (typically oxygen, carbon, or another nitrogen), but it can bond to other elements.
Urea
Formula: (NH2)2CO
Urea or carbamide is an organic compound with the chemical formula (NH2)2CO. The molecule has two amine (-NH2) groups joined by a carbonyl (C=O) functional group.
No, It is (NH2)2CO urea , it is a crystalline covalent organic compound used as fertilizer and is soluble in water
acetone: (CH3)2CO Please see the link.
NH2 -CO-NH2 Atomic Weight = 60.02 Nitrogen = 46.7% Hydrogen = 6.7% Carbon = 20.0% Oxygen = 26.6
Formula: (NH2)2CO
Urea or carbamide is an organic compound with the chemical formula (NH2)2CO. The molecule has two amine (-NH2) groups joined by a carbonyl (C=O) functional group.
No, It is (NH2)2CO urea , it is a crystalline covalent organic compound used as fertilizer and is soluble in water
2nh3 + co2 --> (nh2)2co + h2o
acetone: (CH3)2CO Please see the link.
NH2 -CO-NH2 Atomic Weight = 60.02 Nitrogen = 46.7% Hydrogen = 6.7% Carbon = 20.0% Oxygen = 26.6
common name: 1-butylamine
Urea is a waste product produced by the body, which it needs to get rid of, and it does that through the kidneys, by excreting urea in urine (NH2)2CO... It comes from the breakdown of Amino Acids.
Urea has the formula (NH2)2CO, which equates to (14 + 2)2 +(12+16)= 32+28 = 60g Hence, 30g of urea is 0.5 mols.
No Urea phosphate: (NH2)2CO + H3PO4 Uric acid : over on the left uric acid contains a urea-structure, but there is no phosphate/phosphoric acid in the structure.
2 NH3 + CO2 → H2N-COONH4 H2N-COONH4 → (NH2)2CO + H2O those two steps are how urea is made commericaly
Acetone is the common name. It is also known as dimethly ketone or 2-proponone, which are its proper names, in chemistry. =)