Why is the molecular formula of a compound more useful to a forensic scientist than an empirical formula?

1 Answer
Dec 6, 2015

An empirical formula can represent more than one compound. A molecular formula represents one compound, and its structural isomers if applicable.

Explanation:

Examples:
Molecular compounds with empirical formula "CH":
acetylene: "C"_2"H"_2"
benzene: "C"_6"H"_6"

Molecular compounds with empirical formula "CH"_2":
ethylene: "C"_2"H"_4"
butene: "C"_4"H"_8"
cyclohexane: "C"_6"H"_12"

Molecular compounds with empirical formula "CH"_2"O":
formaldehyde: "CH"_2"O"
acetic acid: "C"_2"H"_4"O"_2"
glyceraldehyde: "C"_3"H"_6"O"_3"
glucose, fructose, galactose (structural isomers): "C"_6"H"_12"O"_6"

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http://www.chem.wisc.edu/deptfiles/genchem/sstutorial/Text6/Tx65/tx65.html