It is a saturated hydrocarbon. This because it contains the maximum number of hydrogen required to bind with the carbon atoms present in the compound
Oxygen is a chemical element, acetylene is an organic chemical compound.
The difference between a hydrocarbon and a fatty acid is that a fatty acid is a hydrocarbon chain with a carboxylic acid head.
Monomers are small hydrocarbon molecules that form polymers.
A saturated solution.
This is just a fancy way of saying acetylene which can be a liquid, a solid, or a gas depending on the temperature and pressure it is subjected to. Most often, under STP or RTP, acetylene is a gas.
Yes it is
Acetylene, C2H2, is a pretty simple hydrocarbon. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acetylene
Alkanes are saturated, so if the hydrocarbon has -ane at the end of it, it is saturated.
No, methane is actually the simplest saturated hydrocarbon as it consists of single carbon and four hydrogen atoms. Unsaturated hydrocarbons contain at least one carbon-carbon double or triple bond, such as ethylene (C2H4) or acetylene (C2H2).
Saturated hydrocarbon does not decolourise bromine water while unsaturated hydrocarbon decolourize it.
If a hydrocarbon C5H10 behaves as a saturated compound, it must be a cyclopentane. Saturated compounds contain only single bonds, and in the case of C5H10, cyclopentane is the only possible saturated hydrocarbon solution.
The word acetylene is a noun. Acetylene is a gaseous hydrocarbon. The word was conceived in 1864 by Marcelin-Pierre-Eugene Berthelot, a noted chemist in France.
The simplest is acetylene C2H2.
A hydrocarbon is a chemical compound made up of only hydrogen and carbon atoms. It can be either saturated (containing only single bonds, such as methane) or unsaturated (containing double or triple bonds, such as ethylene or acetylene).
alkanes
No, acetylene is not a solution. It is a hydrocarbon gas composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms, with the chemical formula C2H2. Solutions typically involve a solute being dissolved in a solvent, but acetylene exists as a pure gas under normal conditions.
what distinguishing characteristic is common in the names of saturated hydrocarbons?