The chemical formula "CH" does not correspond to a stable compound. "C" is the symbol for carbon and "H" is the symbol for hydrogen, but they would typically be found in compounds with multiple atoms of each (e.g. methane, CH4). If you meant something different with "CH", please provide more context.
The molecular formula for benzene is C6H6, and the empirical formula is also C6H6. The empirical formula represents the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a compound, while the molecular formula gives the actual number of each type of atom in a molecule.
The general molecular formula for lipids is CnH2nO, where "n" represents the number of carbon atoms in the lipid molecule. Lipids can vary in structure, with different types such as triglycerides, phospholipids, and sterols having distinct molecular formulas based on their specific composition.
CH will be the empirical formula and C12H12 will be the molecular formula
C-H is a covalent bond because the electronegativity varies by less than 0.5 units
CH-OH is a covalent bond. In this bond, carbon shares electrons with oxygen and hydrogen to form a molecular structure.
CH what? CH does not exists by itself
The molecular formula of all the hexanes is C6H14. (Remember the numbers should be subscripts.) However there are isomers: CH3CH2CH2CH2CH2CH3, (CH 3 ) 2 CH(CH 2 ) 2 CH 3 CH 3 CH 2 CH(CH 3 )CH 2 CH 3 CH 3 CH(CH 3 )CH(CH 3 )CH 3 CH 3 C(CH 3 ) 2 CH 2 CH 3 Wikipedia shows them clearly.
The molecular formula of a compound with an empirical formula of CH is likely to be CH, as there is only one carbon atom and one hydrogen atom in the empirical formula. In this case, the empirical formula is also the molecular formula.
The molecular formula for benzene is C6H6, and the empirical formula is also C6H6. The empirical formula represents the simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a compound, while the molecular formula gives the actual number of each type of atom in a molecule.
The molecular formula is the formula of a discrete (single) molecule of the substance.The formula unit is generally defined in the same way as the empirical formula, which is the simplest whole number ratio of the elementsChemical formula includes both molecular and formula units.Examples:-Benzene a molecule consisting of a ring of 6 carbon atoms each with a hydrogen attached:-molecular formula C6H6formula unit CH (which is the result you would get if you analysed the compound and worked out the atomic ratio of carbon to hydrogen.NaCl is ionic so you cannot write a molecular formula you express the compound simply as the formula unit (empirical formula)- in its simplest case NaCl (never Na2Cl2 or some such)How can you tell whether a formula is molecular formula or a formula unit. Well if the formula could be "simplified" like benzene C6H6 could be simplified to CH then you know its a molecular formula. Something like SO2 and TiO2, well you need to be told. (SO2 is molecular, TiO2 is ionic)
The molecular formula for styrene is C8H8. This is derived by multiplying the empirical formula (CH) by a factor of 8 to get the molecular formula. Styrene consists of 8 carbon atoms and 8 hydrogen atoms.
The general molecular formula for lipids is CnH2nO, where "n" represents the number of carbon atoms in the lipid molecule. Lipids can vary in structure, with different types such as triglycerides, phospholipids, and sterols having distinct molecular formulas based on their specific composition.
The net ionic equation for the reaction between sodium acetate (NaCH₃COO) and barium hydroxide (Ba(OH)₂) is: CH₃COO⁻(aq) + Ba²⁺(aq) → Ba(CH₃COO)₂(s) Sodium ions and hydroxide ions do not participate in the formation of the precipitation of barium acetate, so they are not included in the net ionic equation.
CH will be the empirical formula and C12H12 will be the molecular formula
C-H is a covalent bond because the electronegativity varies by less than 0.5 units
yes it have two isomer CH3.CH2.CH=CH-CH3, and CH3-CH=C-CH3 ! CH3 BY ATIF JUTT
The molecular formula of the compound CH with a molar mass of 42.0 g/mol is C3H3. This can be calculated by dividing the molar mass by the molar mass of a carbon atom (12 g/mol) to determine the number of carbon atoms, and then assigning the remaining mass to hydrogen atoms.