Chemistry Express: The Weight of Protons, Neutrons and Electrons

in #science7 years ago

How much do protons, neutrons and electrons weigh?

Protons and neutrons weigh 1 atomic mass unit each. An atomic mass unit (amu) is a tiny fraction of a gram. This is about 1.66 x 10-24 gram, a reaaally small number!

Why this weird fraction of a gram and not any other number? Because the atomic mass unit is defined using the most common isotope of carbon, Carbon-12. With 6 protons and 6 neutrons, it has a mass of exactly 12 amu. So, 1 proton has a mass of 1 amu, and 1 neutron has a mass of 1 amu as well.

aid1083156-v4-728px-Calculate-Atomic-Mass-Step-4-Version-2.jpg
image credit

Electrons are even lighter than that! They are approximately 1836 times lighter than protons and neutrons. This is why their mass is quite insignificant and we usually don’t count it in our basic chemistry equations.

What is the difference between atomic number and mass number?

-The atomic number of an element is how many protons it has.
-The mass number of an element is how many protons plus how many neutrons it has.

So for example in the below image:

carbon-mass-number.png
image credit

12 is the mass number (6 protons and 6 neutrons) and 6 is the atomic number (only the protons).

What is the difference between atomic mass and atomic weight?

-As we saw above, the atomic mass is the total mass of protons and neutrons in an atom or isotope.
-However, most periodic tables present the elements' atomic weight. This is the average atomic mass of all the different naturally-occurring isotopes.

As explained in a previous article, an isotope is a variant of the same element. Variants are defined by the number of neutrons. For example, the difference between the isotopes Carbon-12 and Carbon-14, is that Carbon-12 has 6 neutrons while Carbon-14 has 8 neutrons. (Note: They both have 6 protons. If they had a different amount of protons then they would no longer be carbon but another element!)

In our example, Carbon-12 is so much more abundant in nature than Carbon-14! Therefore their average (= atomic weight) is not 13 but comes down to 12.0107, which is the number you will observe on the periodic table.

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I can't wait for a quantum scale to measure my real weight minus the dark matter.

Lol. This will definitely be the next project!

Soul_Eater_43 The Cryptofiend tweeted @ 06 Jun 2017 - 21:52 UTC

#Chemistry Express: The Weight of Protons, Neutrons and Electrons — @Steemit #science buff.ly/2sQ759d https://t.co/eyo5o1JUwU

Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.

Thanks a lot! :)

You're welcome!

Nicely summarized !

This is definitely a good explanation of the concept !

Thank you! I've been meaning to start these a long time ago but I'm always busy with work. I'm determined to do it now!

Followed you and upvoted. You deserve it.

You explained so well, I wish I could get such explanation in my school life.... You know in schools they teach in such traditional approach, sometimes (probably all of the times) students don't make out the idea of the inner structure of a molecule. This concept of weight is essential to make it simpler to understand.

Will be following your updates :)

Thank you so much for your kind comment. It means a lot and it really gives me motivation to continue! I agree that in school they usually teach us to memorize things, without understanding how something really works and being able to explain it in our own words. This is what I'm trying to do here... :)

Keep up your good work. Currently, I am studying biotech engineering, but enjoyed reading your article. Waiting for more :)

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