Chemistry, asked by tcmlepcha, 9 months ago

Why can't alkene be formed with one carbon atom?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Alkenes are acyclic (branched or unbranched) hydrocarbons having one carbon-to-carbon double bond (C=C) and the general molecular formula CnH2n [16]. Because alkenes contain less than the maximum possible number of hydrogen atoms per carbon atom, they are said to be unsaturated.

Answered by Riits2003
0

Answer:

Rotation about the carbon–carbon double bond is restricted because it incurs an energetic cost to break the alignment of the p orbitals on the two carbon atoms. As a consequence, substituted alkenes may exist as one of two isomers, called cis or trans isomers.

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