C5H10O2
Because it's incorrect to say, C2.5H5O, so we multiply the subscript by 2 to get rid of the fraction.
C5h10o2
Molecular formula: C4H8O2 Empirical formula: C2H4O Highest common factor of 4, 8 and 2 is 2 So divide the the number of each molecule by 2 So: 4/2 = 2 8/2 = 4 2/2 = 1
CH2O is not only the empirical but also the molecular formula for formaldehye. It is also the empirical but not the molecular formula for hydroxyacetaldehyde, acetic acid, methyl formate, 1,3-dihydroxyacetone, and many other compounds.
Butane, (CH3CH2CH2CH3) and methyl propane, (CH3CH(CH3)CH3). The old, non-IUPAAC name for the latter is Isobutane. Both, of course have the same empirical formula of C4H10.
I'm looking up the structure myself, but the components are methanol and butanoic acid.
Formula: C6H5CH3
The molecular formula for methyl butyrate, also known as methyl butanoate, is C5H10O2.
Methyl butyrate smell like apples.
Methyl-2-methyl butyrate is CH3-CH2-CH(CH3)-COOCH3, it may be prepared by reacting 2-methyl butyric acid with methanol in presence of sulphuric acid.
it is organic
Molecular formula: C4H8O2 Empirical formula: C2H4O Highest common factor of 4, 8 and 2 is 2 So divide the the number of each molecule by 2 So: 4/2 = 2 8/2 = 4 2/2 = 1
CH2O is not only the empirical but also the molecular formula for formaldehye. It is also the empirical but not the molecular formula for hydroxyacetaldehyde, acetic acid, methyl formate, 1,3-dihydroxyacetone, and many other compounds.
the reactants are methanol and butyric acid
Butanone is the IUPAC name for methyl ethyl ketone (MEK). Empirical: C4H8O. Structural: CH3COCH2CH3.
The chemical formula for methyl chloroform is CH3CCl3
The chemical formula of 2-methyl-2-butanol is C15H12O.
Butane, (CH3CH2CH2CH3) and methyl propane, (CH3CH(CH3)CH3). The old, non-IUPAAC name for the latter is Isobutane. Both, of course have the same empirical formula of C4H10.
The formula is C7H8.