No. Ordinary n-hexane is C6H14 and is unsaturated.
Cyclohexane is C6H12 as it has 1 unit of unsaturation due to its cyclic structure.
In this case, the empirical formula and the molecular formula are the same and it is K3PO4.
Yes it can be
no
nope. they have the same formula but different molecular structures
An empirical formula may or may not be the same as a molecular formula. The empirical formula of a compound shows the smallest whole-number ratio of the atoms compound. The molecular formula tells the actual number of each kind of atom present in a molecule of the compound.
Yes. This is very common among organic compounds. For example, cyclohexane and hexenes -1, -2, and -3 all have the same molecular formula, C6H12.
Both formulas are possible molecular formulas for the same empirical formula, CH2.
why is the atomic symbol and the molecular formula of copper the same?its because of the formula being for copper its the same as the... idk how to explain
CCl4 is the molecular formula for carbon tetrachloride. It is the same as its empirical formula.
Yes, it is possible for an empirical formula to be the same as the molecular formula. For example, Lactic acid's molecular formula is C3H6O3, which would make its empirical formula CH2O.
Isomers
Yes.
Isomers.
For sodium oxide, the empirical formula is the same as the formula unit, Na2O. (If any formula unit or molecular formula contains an atomic symbol with no following subscript, the empirical and actual formulas will be the same.)
In this case, the empirical formula and the molecular formula are the same and it is K3PO4.
The molecular formula of hexane is C6H14. The empirical formula is the same as the molecular formula after division of all subscripts in the molecular formula by the highest integer that produce an integer quotient from each subscript in the molecular formula. Therefore, the empirical formula of hexane is C3H7.
isomers