Carbohydrates.
Compounds that contain carbon-hydrogen bonding are collectively termed organic compounds. These are simply compounds that would contain hydrogen and carbon elements.
The general term hydrocarbons is applied to compounds containing carbon-hydrogen bonds (and only the elements hydrogen and carbon). The basic string starts like this: methane (CH4), ethane (C2H6), propane (C3H8), .... Check out the Wikipedia post on hydrocarbons. You'll find a link to their article below.
Ionic compounds, metallic compounds, and intermetallic compounds do not contain covalent bonds. Ionic compounds form through the transfer of electrons between atoms, metallic compounds involve a sea of delocalized electrons shared between atoms, and intermetallic compounds consist of metal atoms with different electronegativities bonding in a specific crystal structure.
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.
A. KF contains ionic bonding, not covalent bonding. B. N2, D. HBr, and E. NO2 contain covalent bonds. C. Cl4 is not a valid compound; the correct formula is likely Cl2, which also contains covalent bonds.
Ununquadium don't contain compounds.
Compounds that contain no carbon are inorganic.
A mixture is an association of elements and compounds but without chemical bonding. Compugs contain chemical elements chemically bonded. An element contain the same type of atoms, including isotopes.
Basically, all organic compounds have carbon and organic chemistry is the study of carbon based comounds. Inorganic generally do not contain carbon (with exceptions being carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, metal carbonates, metal bicarbonates and metal carbides).
Molecular compounds are typically made up of nonmetals. Metals tend to form ionic compounds with nonmetals, whereas nonmetals tend to share electrons with other nonmetals, resulting in the formation of molecular compounds through covalent bonding.
No, aerosols do not contain chlorine compounds.
No, while some organic compounds can form hydrogen bonds, these bonds are not inherently organic. Hydrogen bonds occur where hydrogen is bonded to a highly electronegative element such as oxygen or nitrogen. Organic compounds must contain carbon, which is not related to hydrogen bonding.