It is organic as it still only consists of hydrogen and carbon.
it is organic
Well, it's organic. Past that it's difficult to say with certainty. It could be a cyclic diether or diol, it could be an ester, it could be an alkene diether or diol ... the molecular formula alone doesn't provide enough information to be sure.
2-chlorobuta-1,3-diene or Chloroprene is organic - its formula is CH2=CCl-CH=CH2 that contains carbon atoms hence it is organic
CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2 is an impossible compound formula.CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 however is called n-heptane (with CH3 at both endings)
The compound CH2=CH-CH=CH2 when reacts with HBr gives 1,4 addition product, CH3-CH=CH-CH2Br
it is organic
CH2(CH2CHO)2Looks pretty organic to me.
Polythene (polyethylene) is an organic polymer whose monomer is ethene (H2C=CH2). After polymerization the molecule looks like (...-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-...) See discussion for more details.
Well, it's organic. Past that it's difficult to say with certainty. It could be a cyclic diether or diol, it could be an ester, it could be an alkene diether or diol ... the molecular formula alone doesn't provide enough information to be sure.
2-chlorobuta-1,3-diene or Chloroprene is organic - its formula is CH2=CCl-CH=CH2 that contains carbon atoms hence it is organic
CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2 is an impossible compound formula.CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3 however is called n-heptane (with CH3 at both endings)
Ch3-ch2-ch2-ch2-ch2-ch2-ch2-ch3
The compound CH2=CH-CH=CH2 when reacts with HBr gives 1,4 addition product, CH3-CH=CH-CH2Br
It is an organic compound, CH2=CH-CH2OH is propenol.However it's more likely you have meant C2H5OH which is ethanol (standard alcohol), also organic.
1 - bromopropane is the IUPAC name for CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-Br.
CH2 = C = CH2 CH3 - CH = C = CH2 are some of the known alkadiene.. Actually alkadienes are organic compounds having 2 double bonds......
The compound CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CHO is an aldehyde with a straight-chain structure. It consists of a seven-carbon chain (heptanal) with an aldehyde functional group (-CHO) at one end. Therefore, the correct IUPAC name for this compound is heptanal.