THE MOLE
The mole’s beginning is traced back to the most basic units of matter,
atoms. Since atoms are extremely small, scientists have perplexed a
great deal over finding a way to measure atomic mass. They struggled to
find a universal container that had the capability to mass atoms.
Measuring the mass of one atom on a balance in grams is not practical,
because the result in grams is an amount too small to be of any use in
the laboratory. Fortunately, a new idea came about. If two or more
same amounts of different substances are compared, the resulting ratios
can be used to deduce atomic mass. These atomic mass ratios always
remain the same. For example, one atom of Helium has 1/12 the mass of
one atom of Carbon-12. In this way, Helium has an atomic mass of one
unit, whereas the isotope Carbon-12 has an atomic mass of 12 units.
Carbon-12 is the standard for atomic mass. Eventually, a mass
spectrometer was invented to determine a single atom’s mass even more
accurately. It measured atomic mass by comparing the time and distance
an atom traveled when knocked off its course. The invention of the mass
spectrometer led to extremely accurate values for single atomic mass.
Now that the mass of a single atom could be figured, the quest for a
universal container continued. Knowing how much one atom weighs but not
how many atoms exist is not very helpful to the chemist. A universal
container must have the capacity to contain the same number of molecules
under the same conditions of pressure, temperature and volume. Such
conditions made the search for a universal container very difficult.
However, an Italian scientist by the name of Avogrado finally solved the
dilemma of a container. The answer to this scientific puzzle was in
the form of a number, Avogrado’s number. Avogrado’s number, 6.02 x
10²³, is known as the mole and an accepted SI standard for finding
atomic mass.
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