Combustion analysis of a 13.42g sample of estradiol (which contains only carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen) produced 39.01 g CO2 and 10.65 g H2O. The molar mass of estradiol is 272.38 g/mol.
Find the molecular formula for estradiol.
I keep getting C9H12O. I know the formula for estradiol is just double all of these values. Does this have something to do with oxygen needing to be diatomic in the molecular formula?
Anyway, I start out by finding moles of C and moles of H.. then getting each of them into grams. Once I get that, I figure out what difference I need to make up between their totals and the original estradiol sample in grams. That difference should be the amount of oxygen I need in the estradiol formula. So I take the grams of O, get it into moles and make a pseudoformula.
Then I do the standard procedure of dividing each subscript by the smallest and rounding.
I've done this problem three times since yesterday. I thought I might have just messed up with calculations somewhere but that doesn't seem to be the case. What am I overlooking?