It is known as trichloromethane or, more commonly, chloroform.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine. The Chloroform molecule is CHCl3 . Its modern IUPAC name is 'Trichloromethane'.
No such molecule as CHCl4. You either means CCl4 ( tetrachloromethane ; carbon tetrachloride). or CHCl3 ( trichloromethane).
Trichloromethane....the chemical formula is CHCl3
Methyl chloride or (the approved IUPAC name) chloromethane.
I think you have a typo in your molecular formula but CH3Cl is a polar molecule and CCL4 is a non-polar molecule
Carbon, Hydrogen and Chlorine. The Chloroform molecule is CHCl3 . Its modern IUPAC name is 'Trichloromethane'.
No such molecule as CHCl4. You either means CCl4 ( tetrachloromethane ; carbon tetrachloride). or CHCl3 ( trichloromethane).
In general it is any solvent that has chlorine in the molecule. CHCl3 called chloroform, or trichloromethane is one such solvent.
Its IUPAC name is trichloromethane and the formula is CHCl3
Trichloromethane....the chemical formula is CHCl3
Methyl chloride or (the approved IUPAC name) chloromethane.
I think you have a typo in your molecular formula but CH3Cl is a polar molecule and CCL4 is a non-polar molecule
CHCl3 is a polar molecule. Its electron and molecular geometries are both tetrahedral, yet the Chlorine atoms are more electronegative than the Hydrogen atom, making the molecule polar.
The molecular geometry is tetrahedral. The orbitals are sp^3 hybridized. The molecule is polar. The bond angles are 109.47 degrees.
The formula of trichloromethane is CHCl3. The usual molar formulas of the three elements are C, H2, and Cl2. Based on these formulas, one mole of trichloromethane contains one mole of carbon, one-half mole of hydrogen, and one and one-half moles of chlorine.
CHCl3
CHCl3