Chemical Formula
Chemical Formula
Chemical Formula
By:
Dzurrotun Husna (11630039)
Wardah El Maila (11630040)
Hanif Hidayah(11630066)
Riski Maratus Sholikhah (11630060)
CHEMISTRY DEPARTEMENT
FACULTY OF SCIENCES AND TECHNOLOGY
STATE ISLAMIC UNIVERSITY
MAULANA MALIK IBRAHIM MALANG
October, 2012
INTRODUCTION
By this point in your study of chemistry, you have seen many chemical
formulas. Have you wondered where they come from or how we know the relative
numbers of atoms of each element in a compound? This section describes some of
the ways chemists determine chemical formulas from experimental data. Before
beginning, we need to understand the distinction between two types of chemical
formulas, empirical formulas and molecular formulas.
A chemical formula is a single symbol or a group of symbols that
represents a substance. Empirical formula is a chemical formula that includes
positive integers that describe the simplest ratio of the atoms of each element in a
compound, molecular formula is the chemical formula that describes the actual
numbers of atoms of each element in a molecule of a compound. The symbols in a
formula identify the elements present in the substance. When the subscripts in a
chemical formula represent the simplest ratio of the kinds of atoms in the
compound, the formula is called an empirical formula. Most ionic compounds are
described with empirical formulas. For example, chromium(III) oxides formula,
Cr2O3, is an empirical formula. The compound contains two chromium atoms for
every three oxide atoms, and there is no lower ratio representing these relative
amounts. Molecular compounds are described with molecular formulas. A
molecular formula describes the actual numbers of atoms of each element in a
molecule. Some molecular formulas are also empirical formulas. For example,
water molecules are composed of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, so
waters molecular formula is H2O. Because this formula represents the simplest
ratio of hydrogen atoms to oxygen atoms in water, it is also an empirical formula.
Many compounds do not contain discrete molecules but instead are
composed of particles called ions. Ions are atoms or groups of atoms that are
electrically charged. They usually arise in the combination of a metal and a
nonmetal. Thus the composition of compounds such as NaCl, Al2(SO4)3, KOH,
and CuSO4 cannot by identified in terms of the number of atoms of each type in a
molecule, but only in terms of a formula unit, as such compounds do not contain
physically distinct and electrically neutral molecules. The formula units of such
compounds are empirical formulas because they give only the simplest whole-
number ratios of elements in the compound. The formula for copper sulfate,
CuSO4, indicates that there is exactly one atom of copper for each atom of sulfur
and each four atoms of oxygen present in a sample of the compound, but is an
empirical formula since copper sulfate does not contain distict mulecules
composed of a copper atom, s sulfur atom, and four oxygen atoms. The total
numbers of atoms of each element in any sample of copper sulfate will be
proportional to these numbers.
The 19th-century Swedish chemist Jns Jacob Berzelius worked out this
system for writing chemical formulas.
How would you find the chemical formula of a substance? If you know the
substance, its formula and other information is usually listed in a handbook.
Handbooks such as the CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics contain
information on millions of substances.
If you are a researcher and you made a new compound that no one has
ever made it before, then you need to determine its empirical or molecular
formula. For an organic compound, you burn it completely to convert all carbon
(C) to CO2, and all hydrogen (H) to H2O.
CxH2y =(burned in O2)=> x CO2 + y H2O
Thus, from the weight of CO2 and H2O produced by burning a definite amount of
the substance, you can figure out the percent of C and H in the compound.
Nitrogen is determined by converting it to NH3. The amount of NH3 can be
determined by titration, and the percentage can also be determined. Percentage of
O is usually obtained by subtracting all percentages of C, H, and N, if the
compound does not contain any other element.
1. Empirical formulas
Molecular formulas are useful in that they are a very compact and simple
way of writing complex molecules. As mentioned earlier, each element has a one
or two letter symbol which is used to identify it. In a molecular formula, all of the
symbols for the elements that are contained in the molecule are written, and to the
right of each is a number which indicates how many atoms of that element are
used. For example, glucose has six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms, and six
oxygen atoms. The symbols for carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen are C, H, and O
respectively, so the molecular formula for glucose is C6H12O6. As another
example, water has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom, so its molecular
formula is H2O. Notice that there is no "1" next to the O in the molecular formula
for water. Scientists have decided that if there is just one atom of that element,
then the number "1" does not need to be written next to the element in the
molecular formula.
3. Structural formula
a. Lewis formulas
b. valence formula
The function of chemical formulas are used to describe the types of atoms
and their numbers in an element or compound.The atoms of each element are
represented by one or two different letters.When more than one atom of a specific
element is found in a molecule, a subscript is used to indicate this in the chemical
formula.
CONCLUTION