The atomic number of Uranium is 92 and its atomic mass is 238. How many neutrons does the most common isotope of Uranium have?

1 Answer
Dec 31, 2015

146

Explanation:

Interestingly enough, the atomic mass of this isotope is given to you as a whole number.

When this happens, you can say that the isotope's atomic mass is equal to its mass number.

As you know, an isotope's mass number tells you how many protons and neutrons it contains in its nucleus. If you take Z to be the atomic number of the isotope, i.e. the number of protons it has in its nucleus, you can say that

mass number=A=Z+no. of neutrons

Well, if uranium's atomic number is equal to 92, you can say that the most common isotope of uranium will contain

no. of neutrons=AZ

no. of neutrons=238146=146

The same approach can be applied when the atomic mass is not a whole number. For example, the atomic mass of uranium is actually 238.029 u, not 238 u.

![http://inorganicventures.com/element/uranium](useruploads.socratic.org)

In such cases, you need to round the atomic mass to the nearest integer value. This will give you the mass number of the element's most abundant isotope.

As you can see here, 238.029 u can be rounded off to 238 u, so the answer is the same

Uranium-238, which is the most common isotope of uranium, contains 146 neutrons in its nucleus