p = n x Mr / Vc x NA
where n is the atoms/unit cell e.g. fcc packing n = 4 and for bcc packing n = 2
Mr is the Atomic Mass in g/mol
Vc is the volume/unit cell cm3 = a3 where a can be found by the radius of the atom and the packing used. e.g in bcc packing it is "a = 4r/1.732" . In Fcc packing it is "a= sin (4r)" or "a = cos (4r)"
NA is avorgados constant, = 6.023 x1023
Theoretical density refers to the calculated density of a material based on its molecular structure and atomic weights. It is a theoretical prediction. Density, on the other hand, is the measurement of the mass of a material per unit volume. It is typically determined experimentally.
To calculate the volume of a compound when given its molecular weight and weight, you need to first convert the weight to moles using the molecular weight. Then, you can use the density of the compound to find the volume by dividing the weight in moles by the density. The formula is volume = weight (in moles) / density.
Density is a measure of how much mass is contained in a given volume. Theoretical density refers to the maximum possible density a material can have based on its crystal structure and atomic composition.
It is theoretical because cell density cannot be forced to reach maximum density.
All materials have a density. It is impossible to measure the hassium density; a theoretical estimate is 40,7 g/cm3.
It means: * Calculate the density of an object * Calculate the density of its pieces * Compare
You can calculate the mass of an object by multiplying its density by its volume. The formula to calculate mass is: mass = density x volume.
To calculate the relative density of a substance, you divide the density of the substance by the density of water. The formula is: Relative Density Density of Substance / Density of Water. The relative density is a measure of how dense a substance is compared to water.
The density can be measured experimentally.
density = mass/volume
volume/mass= density
density = mass/volume