it is organic
Sodium chloride contains only sodium and chlorine and so is inorganic. In order for a compound to be organic it must contain carbon and hydrogen.
No, Sodium acetate (NaCH3CO2) contains the positive ion of sodium (Na+), a highly reactive metal. It is the product of acetic acid (CH3CO2H) reacting with sodium hydroxide (NaOH). Sodium acetate is mildly basic. Ammonium acetate (NH4CH3CO2H) contains the ammonium ion (NH4+) a polyatomic ion composed of the nonmetal nitrogen and hydrogen. It is the product of ammonia (NH3) reacting with acetic acid. Ammonium acetate is neutral.
Ammonium acetate is a weak electrolyte. It partially dissociates into ammonium ions and acetate ions in solution, leading to a small concentration of ions being present.
Yes, when ammonium chloride reacts with calcium acetate, a precipitate of calcium chloride forms. Ammonium acetate, which is soluble in water, remains in solution.
HCH3COO or CH3COOH better known as Acetic Acid or ethanoic acid under IUPAC.
it is inorganic
Ammonium chloride is an inorganic compound.
it is organic
inorganic
That would be an inorganic compound.
Sodium chloride contains only sodium and chlorine and so is inorganic. In order for a compound to be organic it must contain carbon and hydrogen.
No, ammonium is not classified as organic. Organic compounds are those that contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, while ammonium is a positively charged ion formed from ammonia by accepting a proton.
ammonium cyanate
Butyl acetate is considered organic because it is composed of carbon-containing molecules. Organic compounds are typically derived from living organisms or contain carbon-hydrogen bonds.
No, NH4Cl (ammonium chloride) is an inorganic compound because it does not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds characteristic of organic compounds.
NH4 is not a compound. It is an organic part of a compound which could be organic or inorganic.
Nonexistamine. If it did exist, the best name for it would probably be ammonium carbide, but that particular combination of atoms has loose bonds dangling ... it might theoretically exist as an ion or free radical, though a double or triple free radical (depending on exactly how the hydrogens are arranged) is massively unlikely. HCN and NH2CH3 are both real compounds called hydrogen cyanide (or cyanic acid) and aminomethane respectively.