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Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known...

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Chemical Quantities Chapter 6
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Page 1: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Chemical QuantitiesChapter 6

Page 2: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Atomic Structure Review

• Atomic Mass– Weighted average of all known

isotopes of an element

• Formula Mass– The sum of the atomic masses of all

the elements in a compound– Stated in amu’s

Page 3: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Calculating the Formula Mass

• 3 Steps to calculate the formula mass

• Above all Double Check to make sure you have the correct formula

1. Count the atoms of each element2. Multiply the number of atoms by

the elements atomic mass (round mass to hundredths)

3. Add all the masses together

Page 4: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

B. Molar Mass Examples

• carbon

• aluminum

• zinc

12.01 g/mol

26.98 g/mol

65.39 g/mol

Page 5: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

B. Molar Mass Examples

• water

• sodium chloride

– H2O

– 2(1.01) + 16.00 = 18.02 g/mol

– NaCl– 22.99 + 35.45 = 58.44 g/mol

Page 6: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

B. Molar Mass Examples

• sodium bicarbonate

• sucrose

– NaHCO3

– 22.99 + 1.01 + 12.01 + 3(16.00)

= 84.01 g/mol

– C12H22O11

– 12(12.01) + 22(1.01) + 11(16.00)

= 342.34 g/mol

Page 7: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

The Mole, Chemistry's Mascot

Page 8: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Mole Allegiance

• (Background:  When saying the pledge of allegiance to the U.S. flag, one faces the flag.  If no flag is present, one should face our nation's capitol, Washington D.C.  When saying the pledge to the mole, a real mole is usually not present.  So, one should bend over and face the earth!)

Page 9: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Mole Allegiance • I pledge allegiance to the mole, and to the

science from which it comes, one SI unit, extremely divisible, with micromoles and millimoles for all.     – (Provided by R. Thomas Myers - Kent State

University, Kent, OH)

• I pledge allegiance to the mole, to the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, and to the atomic mass for which it stands, one number, most divisible, with atoms and molecules for all.                                       – (Provided by Sylvia Cooper - Morgantown High

School, Morgantown, WV)

Page 10: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Units of Measurement

• Fundamental Units– Dozen = 12 things– Decade = 10 years– Gross = 144 things– Ream = 100 things– I Mole = 6.02 x 1023

Page 11: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Measuring with Moles

• The Mole is a counting unit– Called the chemist’s dozen– Used to count number of

• Atoms• Molecules (nm + nm) or (m + nm)

– We will count both atoms and molecules

Page 12: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Conversions with Moles

Given xConversion

= UnknownFactor

Factor Label Method

Page 13: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Conversions with Moles

• How do you find mass of one mole of substance?

• We can do this if we know the formula mass

• When we do this we get the MOLAR MASS– The mass in grams of 1 mole of

substance is equal to the formula mass

– Units: grams/mol

Page 14: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Board Examples

Page 15: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Super Mole Highway

• So Far we Can Convert Between– Moles– Grams– Particles

• The Mole Highway will help us convert from one to another

Page 16: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Super Mole Highway

molar mass

(g/mol)

MASS

IN

GRAMS

MOLESNUMBER

OF

PARTICLES

6.02 1023

(particles/mol)

Page 17: Chemical Quantities Chapter 6. Atomic Structure Review Atomic Mass –Weighted average of all known isotopes of an element Formula Mass –The sum of the.

Volume and Moles

• How Do You Measure the Amount of Gas Particles in a Substance– Use STP (Standard Temp and

Pressure = 200C and 1 atm)– We use STP because gas volumes

vary with temperature– Key Points

• One mole of gas at STP will occupy a volume of 22.4L

• 22.4L of any gas will contain 6.02 x 1023

representative particles


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