enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Carbon tetrafluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_tetrafluoride

    Tetrafluoromethane is the product when any carbon compound, including carbon itself, is burned in an atmosphere of fluorine. With hydrocarbons, hydrogen fluoride is a coproduct. It was first reported in 1926. [7] It can also be prepared by the fluorination of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide or phosgene with sulfur tetrafluoride.

  3. Structural formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_formula

    The structural formula of a chemical compound is a graphic representation of the molecular structure (determined by structural chemistry methods), showing how the atoms are connected to one another. [1] The chemical bonding within the molecule is also shown, either explicitly or

  4. List of compounds with carbon number 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compounds_with...

    Chemical formula Synonyms CAS number; C 4 Br 2: dibromobutadiyne: 36333-41-2 C 4 Ce: cerium tetracarbide: 12151-79-0 C 4 ClF 7 O: heptafluorobutyryl chloride: 375-16-6 C 4 Cl 2 F 4 O 2: tetrafluorosuccinyl chloride: 356-15-0 C 4 Cl 2 F 4 O 3: chlorodifluoroacetic anhydride: 2834-23-3 C 4 Cl 2 O 4 Rh 2: dirhodium tetracarbonyl dichloride: 14523 ...

  5. Chemical structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_structure

    Theories of chemical structure were first developed by August Kekulé, Archibald Scott Couper, and Aleksandr Butlerov, among others, from about 1858. [4] These theories were first to state that chemical compounds are not a random cluster of atoms and functional groups, but rather had a definite order defined by the valency of the atoms composing the molecule, giving the molecules a three ...

  6. Three-center four-electron bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-center_four-electron...

    The two orbitals have been overlaid on the same molecule framework. More recent theoretical investigations suggest the existence of a novel type of donor-acceptor interaction that may dominate in triatomic species with so-called "inverted electronegativity"; [ 13 ] that is, a situation in which the central atom is more electronegative than the ...

  7. Fluorocarbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorocarbon

    Perfluoroalkanes are very stable because of the strength of the carbon–fluorine bond, one of the strongest in organic chemistry. [4] Its strength is a result of the electronegativity of fluorine imparting partial ionic character through partial charges on the carbon and fluorine atoms, which shorten and strengthen the bond (compared to carbon-hydrogen bonds) through favorable covalent ...

  8. Tetrahedral molecular geometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrahedral_molecular_geometry

    In the gas phase, a single water molecule has an oxygen atom surrounded by two hydrogens and two lone pairs, and the H 2 O geometry is simply described as bent without considering the nonbonding lone pairs. [citation needed] However, in liquid water or in ice, the lone pairs form hydrogen bonds with neighboring water molecules. The most common ...

  9. Carbon–fluorine bond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon–fluorine_bond

    When two fluorine atoms are in vicinal (i.e., adjacent) carbons, as in 1,2-difluoroethane (H 2 FCCFH 2), the gauche conformer is more stable than the anti conformer—this is the opposite of what would normally be expected and to what is observed for most 1,2-disubstituted ethanes; this phenomenon is known as the gauche effect. [9]