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Grade 10/ Science/ Chemistry/ Carbon & its Compounds
Chapter 4 · NCERT Science 086

Carbon
& its Compounds

One element, millions of compounds. Why carbon shares instead of swaps, how chains grow by one CH₂ at a time, and the chemistry of alcohol, vinegar and soap.

🧬 5 topics⏱ ~38 min📝 20-question quiz
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Play with it

Build the alkane series

Drag the slider to add carbons one at a time and watch each –CH₂– step grow the chain from methane to hexane.

Explore · The alkane seriesadd carbons

Methane — CH₄. Each step down the series adds one –CH₂–.

Learn

The five ideas in this chapter

Carbon has 4 valence electrons, so instead of gaining or losing four, it shares them — forming covalent bonds. Two superpowers follow: tetravalency (four bonds) and catenation (bonding to other carbons in long chains, branches and rings). Together they explain why there are millions of carbon compounds.

Allotropes

Diamond (each C bonded to 4 — hardest), graphite (each C to 3 — conducts, slippery layers) and fullerene are all pure carbon, just arranged differently.

Compounds of only carbon and hydrogen are hydrocarbons. With only single bonds they are saturated (alkanes); with a double or triple bond they are unsaturated (alkenes / alkynes).

Explore · Saturated vs unsaturated

Alkane (saturated)

Ethane — C₂H₆ (C–C)

Single bonds only. Undergoes substitution reactions; burns with a clean flame.

General formula: CₙH₂ₙ₊₂

A homologous series is a family of compounds with the same general formula and functional group, where each member differs from the next by –CH₂–. Properties change gradually down the series. Build the alkanes:

Try the interactive at the top of the page — build alkanes from methane to hexane, one –CH₂– at a time.

  • Combustion: hydrocarbon + O₂ → CO₂ + H₂O + heat (a clean blue flame means complete combustion).
  • Oxidation: alcohols can be oxidised to acids (e.g. ethanol → ethanoic acid).
  • Addition: unsaturated compounds add H₂ (hydrogenation, Ni catalyst) — oils → fats.
  • Substitution: saturated alkanes swap an H for another atom (e.g. with chlorine in sunlight).

Ethanol (C₂H₅OH) — the alcohol in drinks and sanitisers; reacts with sodium to give H₂.

Ethanoic acid (CH₃COOH) — vinegar is its 5–8% solution; a weak acid that turns blue litmus red and reacts with alcohols to form sweet-smelling esters.

How soap cleans

A soap molecule has an ionic head (loves water) and a hydrocarbon tail (loves grease). Tails surround an oil droplet to form a micelle, lifting dirt into the water. In hard water soap forms scum, so detergents are used instead.

Check yourself

Competency quiz

Modelled on CBSE's competency-based pattern — MCQ, assertion–reason and case-study items, the kind that now make up about half your board paper.

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Interactive explainers inspired by OpenMAIC (THU-MAIC, MIT-licensed). Content from NCERT Class 10 Science.

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