no
YES
No. Hexane is a nonpolar substance so it would not dissolve ionic compounds.
The molecular formula of all the hexanes is C6H14. (Remember the numbers should be subscripts.) However there are isomers: CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3, (CH 3 ) 2 CH(CH 2 ) 2 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH(CH 3 )CH 2 CH 3 CH 3 CH(CH 3 )CH(CH 3 )CH 3 CH 3 C(CH 3 ) 2 CH 2 CH 3 Wikipedia shows them clearly.
Yes, C6H14 is a saturated hydrocarbon. Saturated hydrocarbons contain only single bonds between carbon atoms and are fully saturated with hydrogen atoms.
The functional group for C6H14 is an alkane group, specifically a hexane chain. Alkanes are hydrocarbons with single bonds, and hexane specifically has a chain of six carbon atoms.
YES
No. Hexane is a nonpolar substance so it would not dissolve ionic compounds.
Yes, it does C6H14 is the saturated form called hexane.
The condensed structural formula for ethanol is CH3CH2OH.
The structural formula CH3CH2OH describes ETHANOL.
CH3CH2OH, which is ethanol, is a weak acid because it can donate a proton (H+) in a chemical reaction.
the chemical formula C6H14 has 5 compounds
C6h14 + 13o2 ---> 7h2o + 6co2 The website keeps making correctinos to my capitalization of the elements, but this is the balanced equation.
C6h14
Because alkanes follow the formula CnH2n+2 as 6*2+2=14, we can conclude c6h14 is an alkane
No, It is a non-electrolyte,
7 X 10^-6 mol CH3CH2OH (6.022 X 10^23/1 mol CH3CH2OH) = 4 X 10^18 molecules