Methane ethane propane and butane are all gases at room temperature.
Alkanes state at room temp.
Methane ethane propane and butane are gases at room temperature while higher alkanes from pentane till c 17 alkanes are liquids and after c 18 they are solids.
Since nonane c9h20 is beyond that it has to be a liquid not a gas.
And pressure starting with pentane c5h12.
The answer cannot be found from this graph but rather an investigation of states of matter.
Pentane and the seven others displayed in this graph are liquids.
Gas is the physical state of the smallest alkanes at room temperature.
It depends on what you define as solid though because there are alkanes that are in a semi solid state at room temperature.
Alkanes with more carbon content are liquid or solid at room temperature.
Alkanes from pentane up to around c 17 h 36 are liquids.
Alkanes with higher values of n are found in diesel fuel fuel oil petroleum jelly paraffin wax motor oils and for the.
By the time you get 17 carbons into an alkane there are unbelievable numbers of isomers.
Although most alkanes are liquids or gases at room temperature and have relatively low melting points their melting points nevertheless illustrate trends that are observed in the melting points of other types of organic compounds.
Above n 17 they are solids at room temperature.
The alkanes are liquids at room temp.
The homologues larger than hexadecane are solids.
Alkanes represented as c nh 2n 2 are solid at room temperature when n 18.
Pentane through hexadecane are liquids.
The unbranched alkanes methane ethane propane and butane are gases.
There is a drop in entropy when the alkanes change from gases to liquids at room temperature.
Is the crystal structure relative to the liquid state.
The alkanes can exist as gases liquids or solids at room temperature.
Hexane has six carbon atoms and octane has eight carbon atoms.
Gasoline is a mixture of alkanes from pentane up to about decane.
Kerosene contains alkanes from about n 10 to n 16.
Complex alkanes with long chains of carbon are extracted from petroleum rather than found in nature.
The first four alkanes are gases at room temperature and solids do not begin to appear until about c 17 h 36 but this is imprecise because different isomers typically have different melting and boiling points.