Question #5b298

1 Answer
Oct 29, 2015

Technically, (in a given chemical formula) molecular mass, molar mass, formula mass and formula unit mass are numerically the same.

Explanation:

If you were given the number of moles, you can convert it to grams by multiplying it to the respective atom or molecule's mass.

For example, you are given 2 moles of H_2O. How many grams of H_2O do you have? (Molecular weight of H_2O = 18.0g/mol)

2 cancel (mol) x (18 grams)/(1 cancel "mol")H_2O = 36 grams H_2O

The formula is vice-versa if you were given the number of grams instead of moles.

For the molecular weight/molar mass, you can compute this by actually adding up the atomic weights of the given molecule. Again, for example, the water molecule has 2H atoms (atomic weight = 1.01 g/mol) and 1 O atom (atomic weight = 16.0 g/mol).

Thus,

(2 x 1.01 g/mol) + 16.0 g/mol = 18.01 g/mol

For the formula unit mass, it is usually defined as the mass of a unit of an ionic compound.

But then again, ionic compounds rarely (if at all) exists at individual level so to avoid confusing yourself, the value for, say, molecular mass of ionic compound NaCl (58 g/mol) is numerically the same as its formula unit (58 atomic mass unit or amu).