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Question
questions:
- what is a mole?
- what is avagadros number?
- name the units we can convert to using mole.
- make a conversion factor for moles and particles.
- make a conversion factor for moles and volume.
Brief Explanations
- Defines the mole as a standard chemical unit.
- States the fixed value of Avogadro's number.
- Lists common units linked to mole conversions.
- Creates a factor for mole-particle conversion.
- Creates a factor for mole-volume (gas STP) conversion.
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- A mole is the SI unit for the amount of substance, defined as the amount of a substance that contains the same number of elementary entities (atoms, molecules, ions, etc.) as there are atoms in 12 grams of carbon-12.
- Avogadro's number is approximately $6.022 \times 10^{23}$, representing the number of elementary entities in one mole of a substance.
- Grams (mass), number of particles (atoms, molecules, ions), and liters (volume of gases at standard temperature and pressure, STP)
- $\frac{1\ \text{mole}}{6.022 \times 10^{23}\ \text{particles}}$ or $\frac{6.022 \times 10^{23}\ \text{particles}}{1\ \text{mole}}$
- $\frac{1\ \text{mole}}{22.4\ \text{L}}$ or $\frac{22.4\ \text{L}}{1\ \text{mole}}$ (for gases at STP)