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The Mole Mole: convenient measure of chemical quantities.

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Presentation on theme: "The Mole Mole: convenient measure of chemical quantities."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Mole Mole: convenient measure of chemical quantities. 1 mole of something =  1023 of that thing. Experimentally, 1 mole of 12C has a mass of 12 g. Molar Mass Molar mass: mass in grams of 1 mole of substance (units g/mol, g.mol-1). Mass of 1 mole of 12C = 12 g. Calculated same as molecular mass, but has different units.

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4 This photograph shows one mole of solid (NaCl), liquid (H2O), and gas (N2).

5 Interconverting Masses, Moles, and Number of Particles
Molar mass: sum of the molar masses of the atoms: molar mass of N2 = 2  (molar mass of N). Molar masses for elements are found on the periodic table. Formula weights are numerically equal to the molar mass. Use Dimensional Analysis.

6 Conversions 1 mole = (molar mass) in grams
1 mole = x 1023 representative particles 1 mole = 22.4 L of a gas (at Standard Temperature and Pressure) 1 L = (molarity) in moles – for a solution.

7 GRAMS PARTICLES MOLES LITERS OF GAS LITERS OF SOLUTION

8 Examples – Make the Following Conversions:
Convert g of CO to moles. Convert 3.60 x 1024 molecules of N2 to moles. Convert 38.4 g of Mg(BrO3)2 to molecules. Convert 5.03 x 1021 molecules of H2SO4 to grams. Convert 33.9 grams of CO2 to liters (at STP).

9 Examples – Make the Following Conversions:
mol 5.98 mol 8.26 x 1022 molecules 0.819 grams L


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