This is the molecular formula of a compound named "ethane".
A formula that gives the ratio of elements in a compound is called an empirical formula. On the other hand, the formula that shows the number of atoms in each element present in a molecule is called a molecular formula.
Assuming that there is a metal named in the compound (i.e. Phosphorus pentachloride) the formula is simply the metal symbol followed by Cl5 (i.e. for Phosphorus pentachloride the formula is PCl5).
What you write for an ionic compound is called the formula unit, but the formula unit is almost always the same as the empirical formula. The answer to your question could not be the molecular formula because an ionic compound is not a molecule.
See the Web Links to the left of this answer for diagrams of the structure. This structure is called the "NaCl Structure"! Several other ionic compounds have the same structure, but it is named after NaCl since that is such a common compound.
Binet has a formula named after him.
-After 1924
Sorry, but more information is needed to answer this question. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of formulas, each of which has a different solution. If you append to this answer the formula you are asking about, I could help you.
Hydrobromic acid
This is the molecular formula of a compound named "ethane".
Oxidation state is what determines the number of each atom. This is in the ionic formula.
The compound with formula CoCrO4 is named cobalt (II) chromate or cobaltous chromate.
Organic formula is a formula that shows an organic compound and its molecular arrangement.
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IF5
It tells what elements are in a compound and the number of each type of atom in each molecule/formula unit.
You would use the midpoint formula on each axis, given that each ordered triple is represented by (x, y, z). The midpoint formula is another way of saying the mean of each axis.