With few exceptions (e.g., deoxyribose), monosaccharides have the chemical formula Cx(H2O)y, where x is at least 3. Monosaccharides can be classified by the number x of carbon atoms they contain: diose (2) triose (3) tetrose (4), pentose (5), hexose (6), heptose (7), and so on.
C6H12O6
Glucose and some other monosaccharides.
CH2O
The empirical formula for carbohydrates.
General triose Formula C3H603
C6 H12 O6
Cx(H2O)y
C6H12O6
C6H12O6.
The general formula of monosaccharides is Cx(H2O)y.
The general formula of monosaccharides is C6H12O6.
The general formula of monosaccharides is Cx(H2O)y.
CCl4 is molecular formula.
molecular formula of t-butylnapthalene
Ch2o
The general formula of monosaccharides is Cx(H2O)y.
Yes. Three examples are the monosaccharides glucose, fructose, and galactose. They are called isomers.
The general formula of monosaccharides is C6H12O6.
6 Carbon Atoms, 12 Hydrogen Atoms, 6 Oxygen Atoms. I would've written it using subscripts, but I don't know how. Hope this helps!C6h12o6
a molecular formula
molecular formula :]-kyrstiann dynae :]
It would be a molecular formula for C3h5o.
CCl4 is the molecular formula for carbon tetrachloride. It is the same as its empirical formula.
The butane formula is molecular C4H10. Its empirical formula is C2H5
The molecular formula for Starch is C6H10O5.
The Molecular Formula is: CaCO3