Some of the physical properties of hydrocarbons include the fact that hydrocarbons are non-reactive and are soluble in water. Hydrocarbons are able to burn over a flame and will produce water and carbon dioxide when reacting with oxygen. Most hydrocarbons are less dense than water and are able to float on water. Hydrocarbons are non-polar and will react with bromine and potassium under certain circumstances.
red after adding hydrocarbon its blue
No. It is an element.
Propane is not a metal; it is a hydrocarbon.
Because hydrogen would rather be part of water than part of a hydrocarbon, and carbon would rather be part of carbon dioxide than part of a hydrocarbon. When given sufficient opportunity (enough oxygen to completely react with the molecules in the hydrocarbon, and enough heat to initiate the reaction), the reaction converting the hydrocarbon into (CO2)x + (H2O)x (the x meaning without knowing the hydrocarbon in question we don't know how many CO2 and H2O molecules we'll get) will happen.
A liquid mixture of complex hydrocarbon compounds is called petroleum. I think this is the best Answer I can put it as right now.
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True. The chemical properties of substituted hydrocarbons aren't different than the properties of the original hydrocarbons.
its structure whether its linear or cross linked its molecular weight
because of the free sea moving electrons
Because the structure is intermediate between water and hydrocarbon. Chemical reactivity is determined by structure. It does what it does because of what it is, it is "kinda like" water it "acts somewhat like water ", it is somewhat like a hydrocarbon it acts like or chemically reacts somewhat like a hydrocarbon.
hydrocarbon
Hydrocarbon is a carbon dioxide but is also call hydrocarbon
functionalized hydrocarbon
C6H6 is this a hydrocarbon
because methane is a hydrocarbon!
White gas is really n-Hexane. No additives or detergents, just pure hydrocarbon. That is why it burns cleanly in a Coleman lantern or stove.
No, when it is a cyclo-hydrocarbon, Yes when it is an unsaturated hydrocarbon (decene)