insane_alien Posted January 9, 2006 Posted January 9, 2006 it can bond to other elements to make compuonds other than hydrogen eg. H2S or H2O or HF... i could go on.
RyanJ Posted January 9, 2006 Posted January 9, 2006 ryan jones, please explain yourself:-p Indeed it can, atleast according too Chemistry Of The Elements Apparrently its because Hydrogen is present in all organic compounds and then it forms hydroxides, hydrides and many more with just about every other element.... Cheers, Ryan Jones
budullewraagh Posted January 10, 2006 Author Posted January 10, 2006 wow. i apparently wasn't with it when i made the above post. i meant: can hydrogen really form more compounds than carbon? now consider: hydrogen can be found in every organic compound, every arrhenius acid, every hydroxide, every bi-whatever and of course in its elemental form. but carbon is found in every organic compound, in loads of allotropes, carbonates, carbides, cyanides, fulminates, acetylides, carbon halides (dichloroethylene, tetrachloroethylene, tetrachloromethane, hexachloroethane, etc) as well as a whole host of compounds that lack hydrogen but involve multiple carbon atoms and non-hydrogen atoms. and im sure im missing a bunch
woelen Posted January 10, 2006 Posted January 10, 2006 All confusion is just a matter of language . Of course, hydrogen can form compounds with practically every element and in endless varieties. The only constant thing is that it always has a single bond, or is ionic as hydride. But, if you first only knew of organic compounds, H2S, H2O and NH3 and acids containing hydrogen, then of course one can find it striking to see that hydrogen has such a richer chemistry than you first knew of. If hydrogen bonds as H(+) ion, then it hardly exists as naked H(+) ion, it almost always is coordinated to something else. In the strong acids like HNO3, HCl and H2SO4 is is bonded covalently. When these acids ionize (e.g. in water, or liquid ammonia), then H(+) is coordinated to H2O or NH3: H3O(+) and NH4(+). The only compound, which I know of, and which has a naked proton, a real H(+) ion, is a recently discovered chloro-borane-based super acid. This is the strongest acid known, yet hardly corrosive to most materials.
budullewraagh Posted January 11, 2006 Author Posted January 11, 2006 yes but i pray you tell me whether carbon really does form less compounds than hydrogen, my dear woelen
woelen Posted January 11, 2006 Posted January 11, 2006 You cannot easily say, which element forms less compounds. How would you count this? Most organics happen to be compounds, both of H and C. What I can state, however, is that the chemistry of C is even more rich than the chemistry of H. C has 4 electrons, available for bonding, while H only has one. In organic compounds, the C atom can be present in many different bondingschemes, while the H-atoms basically are always bound in one of few ways (most notably a single bond to other element).
RyanJ Posted January 11, 2006 Posted January 11, 2006 Well, the book seems too beincludng complex chemistry too, Hydrogen seems to have a lot of reactions in commplex chemistry so could this contribute too their result? Cheers, Ryan Jones
YT2095 Posted January 11, 2006 Posted January 11, 2006 since we Still as yet don`t know ALL the possible chemical permutations, it really is almost impossible to answer on that basis alone. probably not the "Definative answer" you were looking for, but it`s Honest btw, I altered the thread title for you, I`m glad you eventualy stated what you DID mean. if anything like that ever happens again, Please, just PM me and let me know, that`s what I`m here for
budullewraagh Posted January 12, 2006 Author Posted January 12, 2006 "Most organics happen to be compounds, both of H and C." actually all organics are, considering the fact that "organic" compounds are defined as having both H and C
akcapr Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 Im not sure if bucky balls are considered organic (theyre all carbon) but the have no hydrogens attached. That may an exception to the H in every organic rule.
ecoli Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 Im not sure if bucky balls are considered organic (theyre all carbon) but the have no hydrogens attached. That may an exception to the H in every organic rule. And I believe there are come Halocarbons that lack H that are still considered organic molecules.
RyanJ Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 And I believe there are come Halocarbons that lack H that are still considered organic molecules. As far as I can find there are two definitions, not shure which is correct but the first is most commonly used: A compound containing hydrocarbon groups. any compound of carbon and another element or a radical Cheers, Ryan Jones
jdurg Posted January 12, 2006 Posted January 12, 2006 And I believe there are come Halocarbons that lack H that are still considered organic molecules. Carbon tetrachloride is a prime example. (CCl4)
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