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The Mole

Date post: 06-Jan-2016
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The Mole. Not this kind. Or this kind. But First, An Analogy. If I ask you to go get 3 dozen eggs, that’s 36 eggs. 1 dozen = 12 This is not exactly a unit; it’s a grouping that modifies a unit. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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The Mole Not this kind Or this kind
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Page 1: The Mole

The Mole

Not this kind Or this kind

Page 2: The Mole

But First, An AnalogyIf I ask you to go get 3 dozen eggs, that’s 36 eggs.

1 dozen = 12

This is not exactly a unit; it’s a grouping that modifies a unit.

I still need to tell you 3 dozen eggs, or 2 dozen bagels; eggs and bagels are the actual unit.

All I’ve done is put them into groups of 12 to make counting easier.

Page 3: The Mole

Back to the MoleA mole is a grouping just like pair (2), or dozen (12)

1 mole = 6.022*1023 (this is called Avogadro’s number)

Ok, so that’s a lot of stuff.

We can have a mole of anything: bagels, eggs, walruses.(that’s a lot of walruses)

We can have two moles of bagels, in which case we have 1204400000000000000000000 bagels (12.044*1023)

Probably, this is not a useful grouping for bagels, eggs, or really much of anything else you can see.

Page 4: The Mole

Definitely not Walruses

Physics on a mole of moles: http://what-if.xkcd.com/4/Walruses would presumably be about the same.

Page 5: The Mole

But What About Atoms?

This is what one mole of carbon atoms (graphite allotrope) looks like.

Counting out atoms or molecules in groups of moles is a lot more reasonable.

(In dozens, this is still 50183000000000000000000 dozen atoms. Dozens will not be a very useful grouping here)

Page 6: The Mole

Doing Math With Moles

Page 7: The Mole

Yes, you can have decimals

Page 8: The Mole

Moles Are Not Conserved

Page 9: The Mole

Moles Are Not ConservedBecause it makes 1 mole of molecules. We have grouped the atoms together into molecules, then counted how many of those groups we have.

It’s easier to see with pairs:

1 pair of CO2 =

Which is 1 pair of C, and two pairs of O:

So unlike mass/energy, which can neither be created nor destroyed, moles are not conserved. If you start with 3 moles of something, you don’t have to end up with three moles, because you may have chosen to group the things differently.

So 1 mole of CO2 is 3 moles of atoms, or 2 moles of oxygen with 1 mole of carbon. It all depends on how we group it.

Page 10: The Mole

So Why This Awful Number?Why 6.022*1023?

Wouldn’t 1*1023 or 1*1024 make more sense, and have the advantage of being metric?

YES! But…

Page 11: The Mole

So Why This Awful Number?Mass of a proton/neutron = 1.6726*10-24 g

Mass of 1 mole of protons/neutrons:

6.022*1023 protons * 1.6726*10-24 g/proton = 1 g !!!

I bet this will turn out to be relevant….

Page 12: The Mole

Why Moles At All?1. Numbers of atoms are so huge that even scientific

notation gets annoying. Writing “2 moles Na” is much simpler than “1.2044*1024 atoms Na”

2. That thing about 1 mole of protons weighing 1 gram

This is a mole cricket. Real thing. I promise. Totally not made up.

Page 13: The Mole

Summary• Moles are a grouping, not a unit themselves

• 1 mole = 6.022*1023 things (Avogadro’s number)

• Moles are not conserved, because you can group things in different ways, which changes how many of them there are.

• 1 mole of protons/neutrons weighs 1 gram.

• Nature is full of terrifying animals.


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