Alkane
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chit phiⁿ bûn-chiuⁿ m̄-sī teh kóng Alkene, Alkyne, ia̍h Alkaline.
Alkane sī chi̍t-ê chióng-lūi ê Iú-ki hoà-ha̍p-bu̍t ê chóng-chheng, mā hō-chòe Paraffin. Alkane sī páu-hô-ê hydrocarbon, in hun-chú lāi-té-ê só͘-ū carbon (C) kah hydrogen (H) gôan-chú chi-kan ê hòa-ha̍k-kiān lóng-sī tan-kiān.[1] Alkane ê hòa-ha̍k-sek siá-chòe CnH2n+2. Alkane ê chú-iàu lâi-gôan sī chio̍h-iû kah thian-jiân-khì.[2] Ta̍k-ê carbon gôan-chú ū 4-ê hoà-ha̍k-kiān (C-H ia̍h-sī C-C kiān), só͘-ū-ê hydrogen gôan-chú lóng kah chi̍t-ê carbon gôan-chú kiat-ha̍p (H-C kiān). Kiat-kò͘ siōng kán-tan-ê alkane sī methane (CH4). Tī alkane ka-cho̍k lāi-té, carbon ê sò͘-liōng pēng-bô hān-chè. Alkane ê hóan-èng-sèng bô kóng chin kiông. Só͘-ū-ê alkane lóng bô-sek bô-bī.