hydrocarbon containing a double bond; often rather reactive.
An unsaturated hydrocarbon that contains one or more C=C double bonds.
ALKANES ARE MOLECULES, MADE OF CARBON & HYDRON ATOMS THAT HAVE THE GENERAL FORMULA, ( N ) CBN + ( 2N ) HDR WHEREIN: N = THE NUMBER OF CARBON ATOMS ETHYLENE, PROPYLENE & BUTYLENE ARE ALKENES
Hydrocarbon with one or more carbon-carbon double bonds. An example is ethylene.
any unsaturated aliphatic hydrocarbon
a hydrocarbon, whose functional group is a double bond between two of the carbon atoms
a member of the ethylene series of hydrocarbons
Any of a series of unsaturated, open chain hydrocarbons with one or more carbon-carbon double bonds, having the general formula CnH2n
an unsaturated hydrocarbon containing a carbon - carbon double bond. The general formula is CnH2n.
A straight chain, unsaturated compound of the olefin series which has the generic formula ..., having at least one double [C=C] bond. ( See Aliphatic).
A chemical compound consisting of nothing but carbon and hydrogen atoms. There is at least one double bond between carbon atoms (C=C)
A compound that consists of only carbon and hydrogen, that contains at least one carbon-carbon double bond. Alkene names end with -ene. Examples are ethylene (CH2=CH2); 1-propene (CH2=CH2CH3), and 2-octane (CH3CH2=CH2(CH2)4CH3).
In organic chemistry, an alkene, olefin, or olefine is an unsaturated chemical compound containing at least one carbon-to-carbon double bond. The simplest alkenes, with only one double bond and no other functional groups, form a homologous series of hydrocarbons with the general formula CnH2n.