Open main menu

Mole

Revision as of 06:20, 15 December 2019 by Ellen References (talk | contribs)

Key Stage 4

Meaning

A mole is an SI Unit used to show 6.02x1023 particles of a chemical.

About Moles

Moles are based on the number of Carbon atoms in exactly 0.012kg (12g) of Carbon.
Moles are used to give a conversion between the number of atoms in a substance and useful quantities for chemical reactions. It would not be useful to talk about 1,000,000,000 atoms in a chemical reaction because that would be such a small amount of the chemical (0.0000000000000017g).
The relative atomic mass of an element is the mass of 1 mole or the mass of 6.02x1023 atoms. So 1g of Hydrogen is 1 mole and contains 6.02x1023 atoms. 235g of Uranium-235 is 1 mole and contains 6.02x1023 atoms.

Equation

Number of Moles of an Element = (Mass of Element)/(Relative Atomic Mass of Element)

Number of Moles = \({\frac{m}{A_r}}\)

Where:

m = The mass of element being used.

Ar = The Relative Atomic Mass of the Element

Number of Moles of a Compound = (Mass of compound)/(Relative Formula Mass of compound)

Number of Moles = \({\frac{m}{M_r}}\)

Where:

m = The mass of compound being used.

Mr = The Relative Formula Mass of the compound

Calculating Moles

Calculating Moles from Masses

The Periodic Table is needed to for mole calculations in order to find the Relative Atomic Masses of the elements.

Calculating Moles for Elements
Calculate the number of moles in 36g of Carbon Calculate the number of moles in 2g of Oxygen Calculate the number of moles in 47g of Uranium-235

Relative Atomic Mass of Carbon = 12g

No. Moles = \({\frac{m}{A_r}}\)

No. Moles = \({\frac{36}{12}}\)

No. Moles = 3mol

Relative Atomic Mass of Oxygen = 16g

No. Moles = \({\frac{m}{A_r}}\)

No. Moles = \({\frac{2}{16}}\)

No. Moles = 0.125mol

Relative Atomic Mass of Uranium-235 = 235g

No. Moles = \({\frac{m}{A_r}}\)

No. Moles = \({\frac{47}{235}}\)

No. Moles = 0.2mol

Calculating Moles for Compounds
Calculate the number of moles in 32g of Methane Calculate the number of moles in 22g of Carbon Dioxide Calculate the number of moles in 115g of Ethanol

Chemical Formula of Methane = CH4

Relative Atomic Mass of Carbon = 12g

Relative Atomic Mass of Hydrogen = 1g

Relative Formula Mass of CH4 = 12 + 1 x 4

Relative Formula Mass of CH4 = 16

No. Moles = \({\frac{m}{M_r}}\)

No. Moles = \({\frac{32}{16}}\)

No. Moles = 2mol

Chemical Formula of Carbon Dioxide = CO2

Relative Atomic Mass of Carbon = 12g

Relative Atomic Mass of Oxygen = 16g

Relative Formula Mass of CH4 = 12 + 16 x 2

Relative Formula Mass of CH4 = 44g

No. Moles = \({\frac{m}{M_r}}\)

No. Moles = \({\frac{22}{44}}\)

No. Moles = 0.5mol

Chemical Formula of Ethanol = C2H5OH

Relative Atomic Mass of Carbon = 12g

Relative Atomic Mass of Hydrogen = 1g

Relative Atomic Mass of Oxygen = 16g

Relative Formula Mass of CH4 = 12x2 + 1x6 + 16

Relative Formula Mass of CH4 = 46g

No. Moles = \({\frac{m}{M_r}}\)

No. Moles = \({\frac{115}{46}}\)

No. Moles = 2.5mol

Extra Information

References

AQA

Mole, pages 106-11, 120-3, 197, 293, GCSE Chemistry; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Moles, pages 106, 107, 111-117, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy; Chemistry, CGP, AQA
Moles, pages 112, 113, 117-125, 132-135, GCSE Chemistry, CGP, AQA
Moles, pages 178-9, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 1, Hodder, AQA
Moles, pages 42, 44-47, GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA
Moles, pages 62-63, GCSE Chemistry; Third Edition, Oxford University Press, AQA
Moles, pages 65-6, 70-1, GCSE Chemistry, Hodder, AQA
Moles; balancing numbers calculations, pages 73-4, GCSE Chemistry, Hodder, AQA
Moles; calculating reacting masses, pages 71-2, GCSE Chemistry, Hodder, AQA

Edexcel

Moles, pages 220-221, GCSE Combined Science, Pearson Edexcel
Moles, pages 28, 29, GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
Moles, pages 76-77, GCSE Chemistry, Pearson, Edexcel
Moles, pages 85-90, GCSE Chemistry, CGP, Edexcel
Moles, pages 91, 92, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel

OCR

Moles, pages 38-40, Gateway GCSE Chemistry; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
Moles, pages 96-99, 165, 170-171, Gateway GCSE Chemistry, Oxford, OCR