The atomic mass of potassium is 39.1. What is the mass of 6.02 * 10^23 atoms of potassium?

1 Answer
Aug 2, 2016

"39.1 g"

Explanation:

The first thing to note here is that the atomic mass, m_a, of potassium, "K", is not 39.1, it is "39.1 u".

The relative atomic mass of potassium, A_r, which is equal to its atomic mass, "39.1 u", divided by 1/12"th" of the mass of single, unbound carbon-12 atom, i.e. "1 u", is equal to

A_(rcolor(white)(a)"K") = (39.1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("u"))))/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("u")))) = 39.1

So remember, the atomic mass of an element is not a unitless quantity. Atomic masses are expressed in unified atomic mass units, "u".

Relative atomic masses are unitless because they express the mass of an element relative to 1/12"th" of the mass of single, unbound carbon-12 atom.

Now, all you have to do here is remember that one mole of a given element is defined as 6.02 * 10^(23) atoms of that element -> this is known as Avogadro's number.

In your case, 6.02 * 10^(23) atoms of potassium will be equivalent to one mole of potassium. Here is where the cool part comes in.

The atomic mass of potassium is equal to

m_a = "39.1 u"

By definition, the unified atomic mass unit is equal to

color(purple)(|bar(ul(color(white)(a/a)color(black)("1 u " = " 1 g mol"^(-1))color(white)(a/a)|)))

This means that the molar mass of potassium, which tells you the mass of one mole of the element, will be equal to

39.1 color(red)(cancel(color(black)("u"))) * "1 g mol"^(-1)/(1color(red)(cancel(color(black)("u")))) = "39.1 g mol"^(-1)

Therefore, you can say that one mole of potassium has a mass of "39.1 g".