atoms in 12 g of c-12
The unit is "per mole", or mol^-1.
Avogadro's number represents the number of units of a substance in one mole of the substance. These units may be electrons, atoms, ions, or molecules, depending on the substance.
A mole of any substance has the Avogadro's number of such units. As an example, a mole of hydrogen atoms is equivalent to 6.022 x 1023 atoms.
By saying Avogadro's number of atoms, you are saying one mole (or 6.02 × 1023 atoms). And one mole of any elements is its atomic mass. Phosphorus' atomic mass is 31.0 grams
A mole.
No.
Its avogadros number
I asked this question wrong. It should be Avogadros Number. Sorry!
atoms in 12 g of c-12
It is 6.02 (times) 10 to the power of 23
The unit is "per mole", or mol^-1.
It is the number of fundamental particles - atoms or molecules - of a substance in 1 mole of that substance.
There is 1 mole of atoms in 6.022 x 10^23 atoms of any element.
Avogadro's number is a constant (6.022 x 10^23) that represents the number of particles (atoms, molecules, ions, etc.) in one mole of a substance. It is used to convert between the mass of a substance and the number of particles it contains.
Its avogadros number which is 6.02 X 10^23 g/mol
Avogadro's number represents the number of units of a substance in one mole of the substance. These units may be electrons, atoms, ions, or molecules, depending on the substance.