You cannot see atoms or molecules with any optical magnification available.
Alkanes have the most possible number of hydrogen atoms with respect to the carbon again.
No. Hydrogen gas is Hydrogen molecules floating around. They are looking for Oxygen molecules with which to make water.
No, when the carbon atoms in hydrocarbon molecules are bonded to as many hydrogen atoms as possible, a saturated hydrocarbon is produced. Unsaturated hydrocarbons have carbon-carbon double or triple bonds, resulting in fewer hydrogen atoms bonded to the carbon atoms.
Fractional distillation of the liquefied mixture is one possible method.
hydrocarbon are made of hydrogen and carbon
Hydrogen and carbon Hydrogen and carbon
Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen ine the ratio of 1:2:1
hydrogen, carbon, oxygen
Yes, all is true.
An example of a saturated hydrocarbon is methane (CH4), which consists of single bonds between carbon and hydrogen atoms and contains the maximum number of hydrogen atoms possible for its carbon atoms.
It depends on the length of the fatty acid chain. A fatty acid that has the maximum number of hydrogen atoms is saturated. The maximum number of hydrogen atoms will occur when the carbon atoms are all single-bonded to one another (no double bonds).
Triglycerides are the lipids that contain the maximum number of carbon and hydrogen possible. They consist of a glycerol molecule and three fatty acid chains, which can vary in length but typically contain long hydrocarbon chains with many carbon and hydrogen atoms.