Isomers have equal chemical formula while having different chemical structures. CH3NH2 does not have different chemical structures with the same chemical formula. Therefor CH3NH2 is not an isomer.
Yes it has hydrogen bonding because the Nitrogen has lone pairs and it is bonded to a Hydrogen atom.
CH3NH2 has the higher boiling point as it has a hydrogen bond between the molecule which is a stronger intermolecular attractive force, whereas CH3CH3 only has covalent bonds which are weaker intermolecular attractive forces.
No, H2O (water) is not considered an isomer. Isomers are molecules with the same molecular formula but different structural arrangements. Water does not have other structural arrangements that would make it an isomer of itself.
The molecular shape of HCOOH is trigonal planar, I believe...
The reduction of 4-tert-butylcyclohexanone with sodium borohydride would predominantly form the 4-tert-butylcyclohexan-1-ol isomer. This is due to the bulky tert-butyl group favoring the axial position in the chair conformation of the cyclohexane ring, leading to the 1-substituted alcohol as the major product.
CH3NH2 is methyl amine, and it is ORGANIC.
The ionic equation for the reaction between hydrochloric acid (HCl) and methylamine (CH3NH2) is: HCl + CH3NH2 -> CH3NH3+ + Cl-
no
The Kb value for CH3NH2(aq) is 4.4 x 10^-4.
An isomer is a molecule with the same chemical formula but different structural arrangement of atoms. A constitutional isomer is a type of isomer where the atoms are connected in a different order.
Kb = [CH3NH3 +] [OH-] / [CH3NH2]
The reaction is:CH3NH2 + HBr = CH3NH3Br
No. CaCl2 is neither ans isomer, nor does it have isomers.
Yes, CH3NH2 can have a resonance structure. The lone pair on the nitrogen can delocalize to form a double bond with the carbon, resulting in resonance stabilization.
[ch3nh3+][oh-] / [ch3nh2]
L-isomer is always found in proteins.
Yes, CH3NH2 (methylamine) is a weak electrolyte. In solution, it partially ionizes into CH3NH2+ and CH3NH− ions, which allows it to conduct electricity to some extent.