No, the (molar) mass (ie. the mass of one mole) is different by factor 2.004:
Oxygen atom (O)15.999 g/mole O2,
Oxygen molecule (elemental gas, O2) 31.998 g/mole O2
Sulfur atom (S) 32.06 g/mole S,
Sulfur molecule (bright yellow solid, S8) 256.48 g/mole S8,
Sulfur molecule (S2) 64.12 g/mole S2 (there are more than 20 other allotropes)
No; 1 mole of molcular oxygen (O2) is 31,998 g and 1 mole of sulfur (S) is 32,06 g.
Oxygen has a molar mass of 16 grams per mole 1 mole = 16 grams 0.8834 mole = x grams x=14.1344 grams
1
1 mole of iron atoms has the greatest mass - 55,845 g.
The atomic mass is grams/mole So when you have e.g. 12 grams of carbon which has atomic mass = 12, you have one mole. ( Avogadro's number is one mole: 6.02×10²³ )
No; 1 mole of molcular oxygen (O2) is 31,998 g and 1 mole of sulfur (S) is 32,06 g.
No; 1 mole of molcular oxygen (O2) is 31,998 g and 1 mole of sulfur (S) is 32,06 g.
32
32 as oxygen is diatomic
because its impossible for an atom to have a mass
Oxygen has a molar mass of 16 grams per mole 1 mole = 16 grams 0.8834 mole = x grams x=14.1344 grams
1
1 mole of iron atoms has the greatest mass - 55,845 g.
In this molecule, there are 4 oxygen atoms, so 1 mole of this substance would have 4 moles of oxygen atoms. Each oxygen atom is 16 g/mole, so 64 grams.
mass of one mole of oxygen atom is 16 grams. atomic weight of any atom is equal to mass of 1 mol of that atom...
147.2 grams C6H12O6 (1 mole C6H12O6/180.156 grams)(6 moles O/1 mole C6H12O6)(16.0 grams/1 mole O) = 78.4 grams oxygen ----------------------------
The atomic mass is grams/mole So when you have e.g. 12 grams of carbon which has atomic mass = 12, you have one mole. ( Avogadro's number is one mole: 6.02×10²³ )