Input interpretation
potassium chloride | molar mass
Result
Find the molar mass, M, for potassium chloride: M = sum _iN_im_i Plan: • Write the chemical formula and gather atomic masses from the periodic table. • Determine values for N_i and m_i using these items. • Finally, compute the mass. Write the chemical formula: KCl Use the chemical formula to count the number of atoms, N_i, for each element: | N_i Cl (chlorine) | 1 K (potassium) | 1 Look up the atomic mass, m_i, in g·mol^(-1) for each element in the periodic table: | N_i | m_i/g·mol^(-1) Cl (chlorine) | 1 | 35.45 K (potassium) | 1 | 39.0983 Multiply N_i by m_i to compute the mass for each element. Then sum those values to compute the molar mass, M: Answer: | | | N_i | m_i/g·mol^(-1) | mass/g·mol^(-1) Cl (chlorine) | 1 | 35.45 | 1 × 35.45 = 35.45 K (potassium) | 1 | 39.0983 | 1 × 39.0983 = 39.0983 M = 35.45 g/mol + 39.0983 g/mol = 74.55 g/mol
Unit conversion
0.07455 kg/mol (kilograms per mole)
Comparisons
≈ ( 0.1 ≈ 1/10 ) × molar mass of fullerene ( ≈ 721 g/mol )
≈ 0.38 × molar mass of caffeine ( ≈ 194 g/mol )
≈ 1.3 × molar mass of sodium chloride ( ≈ 58 g/mol )
Corresponding quantities
Mass of a molecule m from m = M/N_A: | 1.2×10^-22 grams | 1.2×10^-25 kg (kilograms) | 75 u (unified atomic mass units) | 75 Da (daltons)
Relative molecular mass M_r from M_r = M_u/M: | 75