an organic compund having atleast one double bond is known as alkene. They are basically unsaturated hydrocarbons having the general formula CnH2n
Alkene is an unsaturated chemical compound.
This is an assymetric alkene.
Propylene belongs to the functional group of alkenes, specifically as a two-carbon alkene.
In a reaction between an alkene and an alkane, the alkene undergoes an addition reaction to form a saturated hydrocarbon. This typically involves breaking the double bond in the alkene and adding atoms or groups across the former double bond to the alkane. The result is a single, saturated hydrocarbon compound.
Yes, if the alkane is cyclic and the alkene is not.
The keyword belongs to the alkene series compound.
Alkene is an unsaturated chemical compound.
This is an assymetric alkene.
Polystyrene is definitely a compound. It is addition polymer compound. As a compound it is and alkene (ethene) with a phenyl group in place of one of the hydrogens. H2C = CH ){Phenyl) The alkene bond opens and polymerises (chaions up) with another alkene bond. -H2C-CH(Ph) -CH2- CH(Ph) -
An alkene
Propylene belongs to the functional group of alkenes, specifically as a two-carbon alkene.
C4 h8 is an alkene because it sticks to the formula of cnh2n which means that the compound isnt saturated
Yes, a compound with the chemical formula C15H30 would be a member of the alkane series. Alkanes have the general formula CnH2n+2, where n represents the number of carbon atoms in the alkane molecule. In this case, n=7, so the compound falls into the alkane series.
In a reaction between an alkene and an alkane, the alkene undergoes an addition reaction to form a saturated hydrocarbon. This typically involves breaking the double bond in the alkene and adding atoms or groups across the former double bond to the alkane. The result is a single, saturated hydrocarbon compound.
In the bromine test, an alkene compound will decolorize a bromine solution whereas an aromatic compound will not react with the bromine solution. This is because the double bond in the alkene readily reacts with bromine to form a colorless product, while the stable aromatic ring in the aromatic compound does not undergo such reaction.
Styrene is not considered an alkene because it contains a benzene ring in its structure in addition to the ethenyl functional group. Styrene is categorized as a vinyl aromatic compound.
It varies. An alkene is a homologous series that repeats itself. Like alkanes, the key feature of an alkene is the carbon-carbon bond. Alkane has a single bond, alkene has a double bond, and alkyne has a triple bond. So the answer is it depends on how many homologs are present.