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Avogadro’s Number

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Avogadro's Number:

Avogadro's Number (NA) represents the number of molecules, atoms, or particles in one mole of any substance. The unit of Avogadro's number is mol⁻¹, meaning it defines the number of particles per mole. This constant helps relate the macroscopic quantity of a substance (in moles) to the microscopic number of individual particles.

A mole is a unit that represents 6.022×1023 particles (atoms, molecules, or ions), just like a dozen represents 12 items. For example, one mole of water, which weighs 18 g, contains 6.022×1023 molecules of water.

To find the number of molecules in 66 g of CO₂, follow these steps:

1. Calculate the number of moles of CO₂:

The molecular mass of CO₂ is 44 g/mol.
Number of moles () = `"Mass of CO2 in grams"/"Molecular mass of CO2"`=`"66"/"44"`

n=`"66"/"44"`=1.5 mol.

2. Find the number of molecules in 1.5 moles of CO₂:
1 mole of CO₂ contains 6.022×1023 molecules.
So, 1.5 moles of CO₂ = 1.5×6.022×1023

= 9.033×1023 molecules.

Thus, 66 g of CO₂ contains 9.033×1023 molecules.

One mole (Avogadro number)

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