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Moles and masses - Higher

The of a substance can be calculated from the number of , and the number of moles of a substance can be calculated from its mass. The link between the two quantities is the Mr, (or Ar, for and ).

Calculating masses

One way to remember this is 'mass equals mister mole'.

Example

Calculate the mass of 0.25 mol of carbon dioxide . (Mr of CO2 = 44)

mass = 44 Ă— 0.25

= 11 g

The calculation is the same if a substance is a metal or exists as separate atoms, but its Ar is used instead of an Mr.

Question

Calculate the mass of 0.10 mol of iron. (Ar of Fe = 56)

Calculating moles

Again, use Ar instead of Mr for metals or a separate atom.

Example

Calculate the amount of carbon atoms in 6.0 g of carbon. (Ar of C = 12)

amount = \(\frac{\textup{mass}}{{A}_\textup{r}}\)

amount \(=\frac{\textup6.0}{\textup12}\)

= 0.5 mol