In chemistry, the empirical formula of a chemical compound is the simplest whole number ratio of atoms of each element present in a compound.[1] An empirical formula makes no reference to isomerism, structure, or absolute number of atoms. The empirical formula is used as standard for most ionic compounds, such as CaCl2, and for macromolecules, such as SiO2. The term empirical refers to the process of elemental analysis, a technique of analytical chemistry used to determine the relative amounts of each element in a chemical compound.

In contrast, the molecular formula identifies a numbers of each type of atom in a molecule, and the structural formula also shows the structure of the molecule.

For example, the chemical compound n-hexane has the structural formula CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3, which shows that it has 6 carbon atoms arranged in a straight chain, and 14 hydrogen atoms. Hexane's molecular formula is C6H14, and its empirical formula is C3H7, showing a C:H ratio of 3:7. Different compounds can have the same empirical formula. For example, glucose, formaldehyde and acetic acid have the same empirical formula, CH2O. This is the actual chemical formula for formaldehyde, but acetic acid has double the number of atoms and glucose has six times the number of atoms.

Contents

Examples of common substances

Substance Molecular formula Empirical formula
Water H2O H2O
Methane CH4 CH4
Benzene C6H6 CH
Sulfur S8 S
Glucose C6H12O6 CH2O

Use in physics

In physics, an empirical formula is a mathematical equation that predicts observed results, but is derived from experiment or conjecture and not directly from first principles.

An example was the Rydberg formula to predict the wavelengths of hydrogen spectral lines. Proposed in 1888, it perfectly predicted the wavelengths of the Lyman series, but lacked a theoretical basis until Niels Bohr produced his Bohr model of the atom in 1913.

Construction of empirical formulas for prediction of experimental data is considered by M.Ribaric and L.Sustersic in http://arxiv.org/pdf/0810.0905 so as to point out relevant technical problems.

See also

References

  1. ^ International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. "Empirical formula". Compendium of Chemical Terminology Internet edition.

Categories: Chemical formulas | Experimental physics |

 

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Beyond that apocryphal evidence, there has been a host of empirical data released in recent years that shows the county is struggling to keep its head out ...
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can be reduced to the same empirical formula To stretch our hand finger analogy we might have a two handed person H2F10 or an alien with three hands and 5 fingers on each hand H3F15 The empirical formula for each of these would be HF5 since in both cases the ratio is 5 fingers per hand For a chemical example consider benzene and acetylene Above we saw that for

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