The mole (mol) is the SI unit for the amount of a substance and is equal in number to the number of atoms contained in 12 grams of carbon-12, which has an atomic weight of 12. This number is 6.022 X 1023 atoms of carbon. This number is called Avagadro's Number, and can pertain to electrons, atoms, ions, and molecules, and actually anything you can think of. For example, a mole of cars is 6.022 X 1023 cars, a mole of books is 6.022 X 1023 books, a mole of dollar bills is 6.022 X 1023 dollar bills.
a mole on your butt
A mole is a Spanish sauce. Mole verde is green.
There is one mole of iodine in one mole. There are 126.90447grams of iodine in one mole. There are also 6.022x1023 atoms in one mole.
Both one mole of carbon and one mole of sodium contain Avogadro's number of atoms, which is approximately 6.02 x 10^23 atoms. This quantity is true for all elements or substances when considering one mole.
"Mole" is a thick chili sauce. It can also mean "great bulk or mass".
Not sure what you mean by "first letter is a c", but the volume of one mole of an ideal gas at STP is 22.4 Liters.
some vicious mole...
No, one mole of gold is heavier than one mole of cadmium. Gold has a higher molar mass than cadmium, which means that one mole of gold contains more atoms and therefore weighs more than one mole of cadmium.
They will form one mole of water.
1:1, one mole potassium to one mole chlorine
The mole ratio for KCl is 1:1, meaning one mole of KCl is formed for every one mole of potassium (K) and one mole of chlorine (Cl) that react together.
One mole is a quantity used to describe a group containing its 6.022 x 1023 particles.For example :-Substance quantity mass(g)carbon one mole 6oxygen one mole 16nitrogen one mole 14Hydrogen one mole 1silver one mole 108sodium chloride one mole 58.5