If you're talking about formula like chemical formula (NaCl), there isn't one exactly, though sometimes a line is used (single line for a single bond, double line for a double bond, triple line for a triple bond). If you mean like a mathematical formula (LCAO or something similar), then Levine's Quantum Chemistry has a much more thorough treatment than we could possibly give here.
wee on it
The chemical formula of methane is CH4; if you think to atoms methane has 5 atoms.
The chemical formula for methane is CH4. Refer to the related link for the structural formula.
Methane is a compound of hydrogen and carbon, and has a chemical formula CH4 (where the '4' is small, subscript - i.e. below the line)
If you're talking about formula like chemical formula (NaCl), there isn't one exactly, though sometimes a line is used (single line for a single bond, double line for a double bond, triple line for a triple bond). If you mean like a mathematical formula (LCAO or something similar), then Levine's Quantum Chemistry has a much more thorough treatment than we could possibly give here.
yes, methane is CH4
Methane does not have oxygen in the bond.
wee on it
Molecular formula: CH4 Structural formula: . H H C H . H CH4 (1 carbon and 4 hydrogen) it is NOT ch4 it is CH4; 4 being a subscript indicating 4 hydrogen atoms bonded into a single carbon atom
Covalent bond.
The covalent bond. One line is a single bond, two lines between atoms is a double bond and three lines is triple bond
The chemical formula of methane is CH4; if you think to atoms methane has 5 atoms.
The chemical formula for methane is CH4. Refer to the related link for the structural formula.
Molecular bonding or bond linkage
Methane is a compound of hydrogen and carbon, and has a chemical formula CH4 (where the '4' is small, subscript - i.e. below the line)
CH3F - monofluoro methane or fluoro methane CH2F2 - difluoro methane CHF3 - trifluoroo methane CF4 - tetrafluoro methane