Definition of Mole
Concept
One mole represents exactly 6.02214076 × 10²³ elementary entities: atoms, molecules, ions, or electrons.
Purpose
Standardizes measurement of chemical substances; bridges microscopic particles and macroscopic quantities.
Units
Dimension: amount of substance. Symbol: mol.
Avogadro's Number
Definition
Number of particles in one mole: 6.02214076 × 10²³.
Historical Context
Named after Amedeo Avogadro; experimentally determined via gas laws and X-ray crystallography.
Significance
Foundation for mole concept; enables particle counting without direct observation.
Application
Used to convert between number of particles and moles.
Molar Mass
Definition
Mass of one mole of a substance, expressed in grams per mole (g/mol).
Calculation
Sum of atomic masses of all atoms in a formula unit or molecule.
Usage
Converts between mass and moles.
Examples
Water (H₂O): 18.015 g/mol; Carbon dioxide (CO₂): 44.01 g/mol.
| Substance | Molar Mass (g/mol) |
|---|---|
| Oxygen (O₂) | 32.00 |
| Sodium chloride (NaCl) | 58.44 |
Mole Calculations
Mass to Moles
Formula: moles = mass / molar mass.
Moles to Particles
Formula: particles = moles × Avogadro's number.
Mass to Particles
Two-step calculation: mass → moles → particles.
Moles to Mass
Formula: mass = moles × molar mass.
moles = mass / molar_massparticles = moles × 6.022 × 10²³mass = moles × molar_massStoichiometry
Definition
Calculation of reactants and products in chemical reactions using mole ratios.
Balanced Equations
Essential for mole ratio determination; obeys conservation of mass.
Mole Ratios
Coefficients in balanced equations represent relative moles.
Conversion
Convert given moles of one substance to moles (and mass) of another.
Given moles of A:moles of B = moles of A × (coefficient B / coefficient A)mass of B = moles of B × molar mass BGas Volumes and Moles
Ideal Gas Law
PV = nRT; relates pressure (P), volume (V), moles (n), gas constant (R), temperature (T).
Molar Volume at STP
One mole of ideal gas occupies 22.414 L at 0°C and 1 atm.
Volume to Moles
Volume (L) / 22.414 = moles at STP.
Applications
Calculate quantities of gases in reactions; relate volumes to moles.
| Condition | Molar Volume (L/mol) |
|---|---|
| STP (0°C, 1 atm) | 22.414 |
| Room Temp (25°C, 1 atm) | 24.465 |
Empirical Formula
Definition
Simplest whole-number ratio of atoms in a compound.
Determination Steps
Convert mass % to moles → divide by smallest mole number → obtain ratio.
Example
Compound with 40% C, 6.7% H, 53.3% O → empirical formula CH₂O.
Limitations
Does not provide molecular size or exact atom count.
Molecular Formula
Definition
Actual number of atoms of each element in a molecule.
Relation to Empirical Formula
Molecular formula = empirical formula × n (integer).
Determination
Calculate molar mass experimentally; divide by empirical formula mass.
Example
Empirical formula CH₂O; molar mass 180 g/mol → molecular formula C₆H₁₂O₆.
n = molar_mass(experimental) / molar_mass(empirical)molecular_formula = empirical_formula × nPercent Composition
Definition
Percentage by mass of each element in a compound.
Calculation
Percent = (mass of element / molar mass of compound) × 100%.
Use
Verify purity; assist in empirical formula determination.
Example
Water: H = (2.016/18.015) × 100 = 11.19%; O = 88.81%.
Limiting Reagent
Definition
Reactant completely consumed first; limits product formation.
Identification
Compare mole ratios of reactants to balanced equation ratios.
Calculation
Calculate moles of product from each reactant; smallest yield is limiting reagent.
Importance
Determines theoretical yield; excess reagents remain unreacted.
Mole Ratio
Definition
Ratio between amounts in moles of any two substances in a balanced reaction.
Derivation
From coefficients in balanced chemical equations.
Application
Used to convert moles of reactants to moles of products and vice versa.
Example
2H₂ + O₂ → 2H₂O; mole ratio H₂:O₂ = 2:1; H₂:H₂O = 1:1.
Applications of Mole Concept
Chemical Quantification
Calculate reactants/products mass, volume, and particles.
Reaction Yield
Determine theoretical and percent yields.
Gas Calculations
Correlate volume and moles under different conditions.
Empirical and Molecular Formulas
Derive formulas from experimental data.
Industrial Processes
Optimize reactant usage; cost-effective production.
References
- Zumdahl, S. S., & Zumdahl, S. A. "Chemistry: An Atoms First Approach," Cengage Learning, 3rd Ed., 2016, pp. 50-85.
- Atkins, P., & de Paula, J. "Physical Chemistry," Oxford University Press, 10th Ed., 2014, pp. 120-145.
- Brown, T. L., LeMay, H. E., & Bursten, B. E. "Chemistry: The Central Science," Pearson, 13th Ed., 2014, pp. 95-130.
- Petrucci, R. H., Herring, F. G., Madura, J. D., & Bissonnette, C. "General Chemistry," Pearson, 11th Ed., 2017, pp. 70-105.
- Chang, R., & Goldsby, K. "General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts," McGraw-Hill, 7th Ed., 2016, pp. 60-90.