| Term | Definition | Example | 
| Homologous series |  A family of hydrocarbons with the same general formula.  | |
| Hydrocarbon |  A molecule consisting only of hydrogen and carbon atoms. |  Methane | 
| Saturated hydrocarbon |  A hydrocarbon with only single covalent bonds which can not hold any more atoms with out additional bonds being formed.  |  Pentane | 
| Unsaturated hydrocarbon |  A hydrocarbon containing double or triple covalent bonds that can hold additional atoms without creating any more bonds, but only by moving bonds.  |  Butene | 
| General formula |  A mathmatical formula that applies to an entire homologous series and will allow one to find the number of hydrogen atoms in a certain hydrocarbon based on the number of carbon atoms in the molecule. | |
| Isomerism | The trait of molecules to become isomers. An isomer is a hydrocarbon with the same molecular formula as it's corresponding hydrocarbon, but with a different atomic arrangement.   |  2,2 dimethylpropane | 
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
3.1 - I can explain the terms homologous series, hydrocarbon, saturated, unsaturated, general formula and isomerism
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3.1 great work Brett, but please note that the double bonds in a saturated hydrocarbon are carbon carbon double bonds
ReplyDelete3.3 & 3.2?
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