Nikkinotgill Posted July 21, 2014 Posted July 21, 2014 Hi All Is there a way of working out structural formula from the molecular formula, or is it a bit of trial and error until all the bonds satisfied? At the moment I am trying out different variations until I get the one that has all the correct number of bonds, but I feel like this can't be how other people do it! For example - take Valine: how would you know the structural formula from C5H11NO2 (other than googling it obviously) Thanks
hypervalent_iodine Posted July 21, 2014 Posted July 21, 2014 You can't get much structural information beyond what's in the compound and double bond equivalents from a molecular formula.
Nikkinotgill Posted July 21, 2014 Author Posted July 21, 2014 Thanks... ll go back to drawing out possibilities till I get the right one then haha.
John Cuthber Posted July 21, 2014 Posted July 21, 2014 You might not get as far as you think dimethyl ether http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimethyl_ether and ethanol http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethanol have the same molecular formula C2H6O Compounds that have the same molecular formulae but different structures are called isomers http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomer
hypervalent_iodine Posted July 21, 2014 Posted July 21, 2014 As John Cuthber has said, you really can't justify the structure from just the molecular formula. Molecular formula can represent many different chemical structures and you have no way of knowing the correct one for your question without much more info. Is there any reason you are trying to do this?
Enthalpy Posted July 30, 2014 Posted July 30, 2014 http://webbook.nist.gov/cgi/formula/C5H11NO2 Nist lists 38 compounds and doesn't claim to be exhaustive http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C5H11NO2 Wiki has only 5
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