| Empirical Formula | Molecular Formula |
|---|---|---|
Essence | The empirical formula is the first primitive information available to identify the kind of atom of various elements present in one molecule of a chemical compound without revealing their exact numbers. | Once the empirical formula identifies the atoms present, their exact number is disclosed using the molecular formula. The equation used to derive a molecular formula from empirical is, Molecular Formula= n x Empirical Formula. Where n is any integer like 1, 2, 3,.. etc.
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Representation | The empirical formula divulges the atoms’ identity by listing them as a straightforward whole-number ratio. It is the simplest, reduced ratio of all the elements in a compound. While listing organic compounds, carbon is followed by hydrogen and other elements follow alphabetically. | Molecular formula is a true formula listing the exact atoms and their actual number as whole numbers present in one molecule of a chemical compound. While listing organic compounds, carbon is followed by hydrogen and other elements follow alphabetically. When the molecular formula cannot be reduced further, it equals to the empirical formula.
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Example | CH2O (Glucose) | C6H12O6 (Glucose) |
Calculation | The empirical formula of a chemical compound can be deduced once the percentage composition of different elements by mass and their atomic weights are obtained. | The molecular formula can be calculated from an empirical formula and molecular mass. |
Limitations | It only identifies the atoms without revealing the identity of the compound or its functional group. For example, Glucose and Formaldehyde have the same empirical formula (CH2O).
| It does not reveal the molecular structure or the functional groups within the molecule. For example, C3H8O may be an alcohol (CH3CH2CH2OH) or an ether (CH3CH2OCH3) with different structures.
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