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Why do some oxygen containing hydrocarbon form hydrogen bonds and others do not?
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Topic: Why do some oxygen containing hydrocarbon form hydrogen bonds and others do not? (Read 9353 times)
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Jill
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Why do some oxygen containing hydrocarbon form hydrogen bonds and others do not?
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on:
April 04, 2004, 08:21:02 PM »
Why do some oxygen containing hydrocarbon form hydrogen bonds and others do not?
Edit: edited title for better indexing. Mitch
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Last Edit: November 05, 2005, 01:06:43 PM by Mitch
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Mitch
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Re:Need help
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April 04, 2004, 11:00:04 PM »
A hydrogen bond is a bond between a lone pair of electrons on oxgen and a hydrogen atom.
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AWK
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Re:Need help
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Reply #2 on:
April 05, 2004, 04:21:38 AM »
Hydrocarbons cannot contain oxygen.
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Re:Need help
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Reply #3 on:
April 05, 2004, 04:43:22 PM »
Are you asking both as a donor and acceptor?
The differences may be due to the length of the nonpolar tail, or any other structural significance for that matter.
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Why do some oxygen containing hydrocarbon form hydrogen bonds and others do not?