To determine the empirical formula of a compound, we start by converting the percentages of each element into grams. This means we can assume we have 100 grams of the compound, which gives us:
- Carbon (C): 64.8 grams
- Hydrogen (H): 13.6 grams
- Oxygen (O): 21.6 grams
Next, we convert the masses of each element to moles by dividing by their atomic masses:
- Carbon: 64.8 g / 12.01 g/mol ≈ 5.4 moles
- Hydrogen: 13.6 g / 1.008 g/mol ≈ 13.49 moles
- Oxygen: 21.6 g / 16.00 g/mol ≈ 1.35 moles
Now, we divide each of the mole values by the smallest number of moles calculated:
- Carbon: 5.4 moles / 1.35 moles ≈ 4
- Hydrogen: 13.49 moles / 1.35 moles ≈ 10
- Oxygen: 1.35 moles / 1.35 moles ≈ 1
This gives us a ratio of approximately C4H10O1.
Thus, the empirical formula of the compound is C4H10O.