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Calculating Atomic Mass

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Presentation on theme: "Calculating Atomic Mass"— Presentation transcript:

1 Calculating Atomic Mass

2 The atomic mass of an element is a weighted average mass of the atoms found in nature.
If you were to mass an oxygen atom, would it weigh amu? NO! amu – THIS IS ONLY AN AVERAGE OF ALL THE ISOTOPES OF OXYGEN THAT EXIST IN NATURE 16O, 17O, 18O

3 Naturally occurring isotope
The relative abundance of each isotope of an element determines its atomic mass. Naturally occurring isotope Fractional abundance Mass (amu) 11C 12C 0.989 13C 0.011 14C

4 Three isotopes of oxygen occur in nature: oxygen-16, oxygen-17, and oxygen-18. The atomic mass of oxygen is because oxygen-16 is the most abundant.

5 QUESTION If element Z has two naturally occurring isotopes: Z-20 and Z-22 and the atomic mass of Z is 21.5 amu Which isotope occurs most often in nature? Z-22 the relative abundance of each isotope in nature is one Z-20 to two Z-22.

6 Thallium has two isotopes, thallium-203 and thallium-205
Thallium has two isotopes, thallium-203 and thallium-205. Thallium’s atomic number is 81 and its atomic mass is  amu. So, is there more Thallium-203 or Thallium-205? There is more Thallium-205 found in nature. Atoms of both isotopes have 81 protons. Thallium-205 atoms have more neutrons.

7 A sample of oxygen contains three naturally occurring isotopes:

8 The relative abundances and atomic masses are:
% (mass = amu) 0.037% (mass = amu) 0.204% (mass = amu) Calculate the average atomic mass of the oxygen.

9 (percent x mass) + (percent x mass) and so on….
( ) + ( ) + ( ) = amu


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