Carbon compound chemistry is known as...
Biochemistry
Physical chemistry
Inorganic chemistry
Organic chemistry
Organic chemistry: It studies the structure, properties, composition, reactions, and preparation of carbon-containing compounds, which include not only hydrocarbons but also compounds with other elements such as carbon, hydrogen, and so on.Organic chemistry is significant because it is the study of life and all of its chemical reactions. Organic chemistry encompasses all organic compounds that contain carbon. Organic chemistry studies hydrocarbons (compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen) as well as carbon-based compounds containing other elements, particularly oxygen, nitrogen, sulphur, phosphorus (included in many biochemicals), and halogens. The study of carbon-metal bonds is known as organometallic chemistry.
Biochemistry : The study of chemical processes within and related to living organisms is known as biochemistry or biological chemistry. Biochemistry is a branch of chemistry and biology that is divided into three fields: structural biology, enzymology, and metabolism. Biochemistry has become successful in explaining living processes through these three disciplines in the last decades of the twentieth century. Biochemical methodology and research are being used to discover and develop almost every aspect of the life sciences.
Inorganic chemistry :The study of the synthesis and behaviour of inorganic and organometallic compounds is known as inorganic chemistry. This field includes chemical compounds that are not carbon-based, as opposed to organic chemistry. Because of the overlap in the subdiscipline of organometallic chemistry, the distinction between the two disciplines is far from absolute. It has numerous applications in the chemical industry, including catalysis, materials science, pigments, surfactants, coatings, medications, fuels, and agriculture.
Physical chemistry: The study of macroscopic and microscopic phenomena in chemical systems using physics principles, practises, and concepts such as motion, energy, force, time, thermodynamics, quantum chemistry, statistical mechanics, analytical dynamics, and chemical equilibria. In contrast to chemical physics, physical chemistry is primarily (but not always) a supramolecular science, as the majority of the principles upon which it was founded concern the bulk rather than the molecular or atomic structure alone (for example, chemical equilibrium and colloids).