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Empirical Formula Calculator – Find Empirical & Molecular Formula from Percent Composition

Chemistry Formula Calculator

Empirical Formula Calculator

This empirical formula calculator finds the empirical formula and molecular formula from percent composition or element masses step by step. Whether you call it an emp formula or an empirical formula, this tool handles all cases — including multi-element compounds and rounding edge cases.

Empirical Formula from Percent Composition
Input Mode: Percentages (%) Mass (g)
Molecular Formula from Empirical Formula
INPUT FORMAT EXAMPLES
CH2O  or  CH₂O  or  C6H12O6  or  C₆H₁₂O₆
Full: Percent Composition → Molecular Formula
Input Mode: Percentages (%) Mass (g)
Empirical vs Molecular Formula Identifier

Enter a chemical formula to check whether it is already in empirical (simplest) form.

What is an Empirical Formula?

An empirical formula is the simplest whole number ratio of atoms of each element in a compound. It does not necessarily represent the actual number of atoms in one molecule — it only shows the ratio. For example, glucose has a molecular formula of C₆H₁₂O₆, but its empirical formula is CH₂O, because the simplest ratio of C:H:O is 1:2:1.

A molecular formula shows the exact number of atoms of each element in one molecule of a compound. Benzene (C₆H₆) has a molecular formula of C₆H₆ but an empirical formula of CH, because the ratio of C:H is 1:1. Water (H₂O) is special — its empirical formula and molecular formula are the same, because the ratio 2:1 for H:O is already in its simplest form.

Key Formula: Molecular Formula = Empirical Formula × n, where n = Molar Mass of Compound ÷ Empirical Formula Mass

Empirical Formula vs Molecular Formula

Understanding the difference between empirical and molecular formula is one of the most important concepts in introductory chemistry. The difference between empirical formula and molecular formula comes down to one thing: simplification. An empirical formula is the simplified ratio; a molecular formula is the full count.

Feature Empirical Formula Molecular Formula
DefinitionSimplest whole number ratio of atomsActual number of atoms per molecule
Example (glucose)CH₂OC₆H₁₂O₆
Example (benzene)CHC₆H₆
Example (water)H₂OH₂O (same)
How to findFrom % composition / massesEmpirical formula × n
Molar massEmpirical formula massActual molar mass
Can they be the same?Yes — when n = 1 (e.g. H₂O, NaCl, CO₂)

The empirical and molecular formula are the same when n = 1, meaning the empirical formula mass equals the actual molar mass. Common examples include water (H₂O, M = 18), CO₂ (M = 44), and NaCl (M = 58.44). To convert from empirical to molecular, divide the given molar mass by the empirical formula mass to find n, then multiply each subscript by n.

Chemists determine empirical formulas from combustion analysis data — burning a compound and measuring the masses of CO₂ and H₂O produced. From these masses, they calculate the moles and hence the percentage of C, H, and O in the compound. This is the standard method to determine empirical formula for organic compounds in the laboratory.

How to Work Out Empirical Formula — Step by Step

Example 1: From Percentage Composition
Compound contains 40% C, 6.67% H, 53.33% O.

Full Worked Solution:

  • Step 1: Assume 100g → C = 40g, H = 6.67g, O = 53.33g
  • Step 2: Moles: C = 40/12.011 = 3.33 mol, H = 6.67/1.008 = 6.62 mol, O = 53.33/15.999 = 3.33 mol
  • Step 3: Divide by smallest (3.33): C = 1.00, H = 1.99 ≈ 2, O = 1.00
  • Step 4: All whole numbers → Empirical Formula = CH₂O

Example 2: From Mass Data
Sample contains 2.4g C, 0.4g H, 3.2g O.

  • Step 1: Moles: C = 2.4/12.011 = 0.2 mol, H = 0.4/1.008 = 0.397 mol, O = 3.2/15.999 = 0.2 mol
  • Step 2: Divide by smallest (0.2): C = 1, H = 1.99 ≈ 2, O = 1
  • Result: Empirical Formula = CH₂O

How to Find Molecular Formula from Empirical Formula

Example 1: Glucose

Empirical: CH₂O | Molar Mass: 180 g/mol
EF mass = 12.011+2(1.008)+15.999 = 30.026 g/mol
n = 180 / 30.026 = 5.99 ≈ 6
Molecular formula = C₆H₁₂O₆ (Glucose) ✓

Example 2: Benzene

Empirical: CH | Molar Mass: 78 g/mol
EF mass = 12.011+1.008 = 13.019 g/mol
n = 78 / 13.019 = 5.99 ≈ 6
Molecular formula = C₆H₆ (Benzene) ✓

Example 3: Nitrogen Dioxide Dimer

Empirical: NO₂ | Molar Mass: 92 g/mol
EF mass = 14.007+2(15.999) = 46.005 g/mol
n = 92 / 46.005 = 2.0
Molecular formula = N₂O₄ ✓

Worked Examples — Common Search Questions

1 — How do you find the empirical formula from percentages?

Treat each percentage as grams in a 100g sample. Then convert to moles by dividing each mass by the molar mass. Divide all mole values by the smallest mole value. Round the resulting ratios to the nearest whole number (handling .5, .33, .25 cases). Write the empirical formula using those whole numbers as subscripts. For 75% C, 25% H: C = 75/12.011 = 6.24 mol, H = 25/1.008 = 24.8 mol. Ratio H/C = 3.98 ≈ 4. Empirical formula: CH₄

2 — How to find empirical formula from percent composition step by step

Step 1: Write each % as a mass in a 100g sample. Step 2: Divide each mass by its atomic mass to get moles. Step 3: Divide all mole values by the smallest. Step 4: Round to whole numbers using multipliers if needed (.5 → ×2, .33 → ×3, .25 → ×4). Step 5: Write the formula with these integers as subscripts.

3 — How to determine empirical formula from percent composition

The standard method is to assume a 100g sample, convert each percentage to grams, convert grams to moles, and find the simplest whole number ratio. For a compound that is 27.3% C and 72.7% O: C = 27.3/12.011 = 2.27 mol, O = 72.7/15.999 = 4.54 mol. Ratio = 1:2. Empirical formula: CO₂

4 — How to calculate empirical formula from percent composition

The calculation always follows: mass (g) → moles (÷ molar mass) → ratio (÷ smallest) → whole numbers → formula. For a compound of 52.14% C, 13.13% H, 34.73% O: C=4.34, H=13.02, O=2.17 mol. Divide by 2.17: C=2, H=6, O=1. Empirical formula: C₂H₆O (ethanol unit).

5 — How to find molecular formula from percent composition

First find the empirical formula from the % data. Then calculate the empirical formula mass. Divide the compound's given molar mass by the empirical formula mass to get n. Multiply each subscript by n to get the molecular formula. This is the two-step process combined in Tool 3 above.

6 — How to find empirical and molecular formula together

Use Tool 3 (Full % to Molecular) on this page. Enter each element's percentage and the compound's molar mass. The calculator computes the empirical formula first, then uses n = molar mass ÷ EF mass to derive the molecular formula in one sequence.

7 — What is the empirical formula of a compound with 75% C and 25% H?

Moles: C = 75/12.011 = 6.244, H = 25/1.008 = 24.802. Divide by 6.244: C = 1, H = 3.97 ≈ 4. Empirical formula: CH₄ (methane unit). This could be methane itself if n=1, or a higher hydrocarbon if n>1.

8 — How to work out empirical formula when percentages do not add to 100%

If only C and H percentages are given (e.g. 85.6% C, 14.4% H = 100% ✓), verify they sum to 100%. If a third element is missing, calculate it as: remaining % = 100 − sum of given percentages. For example, if C=40%, H=6.67%, then O = 100−40−6.67 = 53.33%.

9 — How to handle decimal ratios in empirical formula calculation

After dividing by the smallest mole value, round only if the result is within 0.05 of a whole number. If the ratio ends in .5 (e.g. 1.5), multiply all ratios by 2. If it ends in .33 or .67, multiply all by 3. If it ends in .25 or .75, multiply all by 4. For C:H = 1:1.5 → multiply by 2 → C₂H₃.

10 — What is a hydrocarbon empirical formula?

A hydrocarbon empirical formula contains only carbon and hydrogen in their simplest ratio. Methane (CH₄) is both empirical and molecular. Ethylene (C₂H₄) has empirical formula CH₂. Acetylene (C₂H₂) has empirical formula CH. Benzene (C₆H₆) has empirical formula CH. The calculator handles all hydrocarbon formulas — just enter C and H percentages with their atomic masses.

Empirical Formula Examples Table

Compound Molecular Formula Empirical Formula n value
WaterH₂OH₂O1
GlucoseC₆H₁₂O₆CH₂O6
BenzeneC₆H₆CH6
Hydrogen peroxideH₂O₂HO2
EthyleneC₂H₄CH₂2
AcetyleneC₂H₂CH2
SucroseC₁₂H₂₂O₁₁C₁₂H₂₂O₁₁1
Phosphorus pentoxideP₄O₁₀P₂O₅2

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an empirical formula?
An empirical formula is the simplest whole number ratio of atoms of each element in a compound. For example, glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆) has an empirical formula of CH₂O because the ratio C:H:O = 1:2:1 is the simplest form.
What is the difference between empirical and molecular formula?
The empirical formula shows the simplest ratio of atoms; the molecular formula shows the actual number of atoms per molecule. Benzene has empirical formula CH but molecular formula C₆H₆. They can be the same when n=1 (e.g. water H₂O).
How do you find the empirical formula from percent composition?
Treat each % as a mass in 100g. Convert to moles by dividing by atomic mass. Divide all moles by the smallest value. Round the ratios to whole numbers (multiply all by 2, 3, or 4 if ratios end in .5, .33, or .25 respectively). Write the empirical formula.
How do you convert empirical formula to molecular formula?
Calculate the empirical formula mass. Find n = given molar mass ÷ empirical formula mass. Multiply every subscript by n to get the molecular formula. For CH₂O with molar mass 180: n = 180/30 = 6 → C₆H₁₂O₆.
Is the empirical formula always different from the molecular formula?
No. When n=1, the empirical and molecular formulas are identical. Examples include water (H₂O), carbon dioxide (CO₂), and sodium chloride (NaCl). These compounds cannot be simplified further.
What does the n value mean in empirical to molecular formula conversion?
n is a whole number multiplier: n = Molar Mass of Compound ÷ Empirical Formula Mass. It shows how many empirical formula units make up one molecule. For glucose, n=6 means one glucose molecule contains 6 CH₂O units.
How do you know if a formula is already empirical?
Find the Greatest Common Divisor (GCD) of all the subscripts. If GCD=1, the formula is already in empirical form. If GCD>1, divide all subscripts by the GCD. Use Tool 4 (EF vs MF Checker) on this page to check any formula instantly.
What is a hydrocarbon empirical formula?
A hydrocarbon empirical formula contains only C and H in their simplest ratio. Examples: CH₄ (methane), CH₂ (ethylene unit), CH (benzene/acetylene unit). Enter the C and H percentages in Tool 1 to find any hydrocarbon's empirical formula.
Can two different compounds have the same empirical formula?
Yes. Glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆), fructose (C₆H₁₂O₆), and formaldehyde (CH₂O) all share the empirical formula CH₂O but are completely different compounds with different molar masses, structures, and properties.
What is percentage composition and how does it relate to empirical formula?
Percentage composition is the mass percent of each element in a compound. It is used to find the empirical formula: treat each % as grams in a 100g sample, convert to moles, find the ratio, and simplify. Two compounds with the same empirical formula will have the same percentage composition.

Related Calculators

Key Formulas
Moles from mass
mol = mass(g) ÷ Molar Mass
Mole Ratio
ratio = mol ÷ smallest mol
n multiplier
n = MolarMass ÷ EF Mass
Molecular Formula
MF = EF × n
Ratio .5 → multiply by
×2
Ratio .33 → multiply by
×3
Ratio .25 → multiply by
×4
Atomic Masses
Quick Examples
CH₂O → C₆H₁₂O₆ (n=6)
Glucose
CH → C₆H₆ (n=6)
Benzene
HO → H₂O₂ (n=2)
H₂O₂
NO₂ → N₂O₄ (n=2)
N₂O₄

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