Inorganic compounds
Inorganic compounds are of inanimate not biological origin. It does not have carbon and hydrogen atoms and are synthesized through the agency of geological systems. The Difference in that, is in biological systems the synthesis of organic compounds incorporates carbohydrates into the molecular structure. Organic chemists usually consider to any molecule containing carbon like an organic compound and by default the meaning of this is that inorganic chemistry deals with molecules lacking carbon. Though, biologists may distinguish organic from inorganic compounds in a dissimilar way that does not hinge on the existence of a carbon atom. Pools of organic matter, for an instance, that have been metabolically incorporated into living tissues persevere in decomposing tissues, but like the molecules become oxidized into the open environment, like atmospheric CO2, this forms a separate pool of inorganic compounds.
The difference between organic and inorganic compounds is not all the time clear when dealing with open and closed systems, since everything is ultimately connected to all else on the planet. A number of scientists, for instance, view the open environment (that is, the ecosphere) as an extension of life and from this perspective might be consider atmospheric CO2 as an organic compound. IUPAC, an agency extensively recognized for defining chemical terms, does not provide definitions of inorganic or organic. Though, the definition for an inorganic vs an organic compound in a multidisciplinary context spans the division among living (or animate) and non-living (or inanimate) matter and residue open to debate as per the way that one views the world.