[Vision2020] Mole Day 10-23 between 6.02 am & pm
Dan Carscallen
areaman at moscow.com
Mon Mar 15 11:53:45 PDT 2010
Ken, I don't want to throw a molar mass of ethanol on the rapid oxidation of
a material in the chemical process of combustion, releasing heat, light, and
various reaction products, but wouldn't it be more reasonable to have Mole
Day on June 2 (6/02) between 10:23 am and 10:23 pm?
Or, maybe we can just have two mole days!
Your pal
DC
-----Original Message-----
From: vision2020-bounces at moscow.com [mailto:vision2020-bounces at moscow.com]
On Behalf Of Kenneth Marcy
Sent: Monday, March 15, 2010 11:40 AM
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Mole Day 10-23 between 6.02 am & pm
I hope everyone had a pleasant Pi day yesterday, 3-14.
Another science holiday to note is Mole day, 10-23, between 6.02 in
the morning and evening. The reference for Mole day is to a chemical
constant, Avogadro's number, 6.02 x 10^23, which is a number of
formula units. The term mole, like a dozen or a gross, refers to a
particular number of things. A dozen eggs equals 12 eggs, a gross of
pencils equals 144 pencils, and a mole of ethanol equals 6.02 x 10^23
ethanol molecules.
>From where did the mole concept come? A German chemist named Ostwald
around 1900 suggested that the term mole [sic] be applied to the
number of molecules [Avogadro's number] of an ideal gas at standard
temperature and pressure in a volume of 22414 milliliters. Since
Ostwald's time, a mole has been redefined as the number of atoms of
carbon-12 in exactly 12 grams of carbon-12, which, experimentally,
yields the same Avogadro's number.
If you weighed a dozen small eggs, then added their weights, that sum
would be less than the sum of the weights of a dozen larger eggs.
Analogously, the weight (i.e., the mass) of an Avogadro's number of
carbon atoms, with atomic number of 12, will be less than the mass of
an Avogadro's number of oxygen atoms, with atomic number of 16.
A molecule of oxygen has two atoms of oxygen bonded together. So, a
mole of oxygen will have twice as many atoms of oxygen as it will
have molecules of oxygen. The molar mass of a substance is the mass
of an Avogadro's number of molecules of it. Oxygen gas's molar mass
is 32, comprised of two oxygen atoms of atomic number 16. Ethanol,
comprised of two carbons, one oxygen, and six hydrogens, has a molar
mass of 46.1.
So, there's a little chemistry to look forward to October 23, which is
a Friday this year. It may be a nice time to remember, and to thank,
your chemistry teacher. (Mine is still alive, in retirement.) You
could use your greeting-card-making software to make a Mole Day card,
and then mail it to your teacher. Imagine a shock, then the pleasure.
Ken
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