What is the molecular formula for hexane, cyclohexane, and toluene?

1 Answer
Nov 20, 2015

You can easily look these up, but let's just figure it out without drawing it first...

n-Hexane has six carbons and is a saturated hydrocarbon. It is the most simple compound of the three. As a straight-chained alkane, it has the general formula CnH2n+2 to account for terminal hydrogens. So, it must be C6H14.

Cyclohexane is simply the same compound as a ring, giving it a general formula of CnH2n. So then it is just C6H12 to account for the absence of terminal hydrogens.

Toluene is the "common" name for methylbenzene. Benzene is C6H6, so methylbenzene adds CH3 and takes away one H, making it C7H8; or better, C6H5CH3.