Molecules to Moles
Convert molecules into moles by dividing by the Avogadro constant.
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Molecules to Moles Table
| Molecules | Moles |
|---|---|
| 1E+18 | 0.000001660539 |
| 1E+19 | 0.000016605391 |
| 1E+20 | 0.000166053907 |
| 5E+20 | 0.000830269534 |
| 1E+21 | 0.001660539067 |
| 5E+21 | 0.008302695336 |
| 1E+22 | 0.016605390672 |
| 5E+22 | 0.083026953359 |
| 1E+23 | 0.166053906717 |
| 5E+23 | 0.830269533587 |
Popular Conversions
- 1E+18 molecules = 0.000001660539 moles
- 1E+19 molecules = 0.000016605391 moles
- 1E+20 molecules = 0.000166053907 moles
- 1E+21 molecules = 0.001660539067 moles
- 1E+22 molecules = 0.016605390672 moles
- 1E+23 molecules = 0.166053906717 moles
- 5E+23 molecules = 0.830269533587 moles
- 1E+24 molecules = 1.660539067174 moles
What is Particles and Mole?
Particles
Definition: Particles is a general chemistry word for counted entities such as molecules, ions, atoms, or formula units.
History/origin: The term became a flexible way to discuss microscopic entities in stoichiometry and physical chemistry.
Current use: Particles are used in mole conversions, reaction counts, and conceptual chemistry teaching.
Mole
Definition: A mole is the SI unit for amount of substance and contains exactly 6.02214076 × 10^23 specified entities.
History/origin: The mole became the standard chemistry counting unit so macroscopic samples could be related to atoms, ions, or molecules.
Current use: Moles are used in stoichiometry, solution prep, reaction scaling, and quantitative chemistry.
Related Amount and Stoichiometry Conversions
These nearby conversions often appear alongside mole and particle calculations in chemistry work.
| Related Conversion | Factor or Rule | Formula |
|---|---|---|
| Moles to millimoles | × 1,000 | mmol = mol × 1,000 |
| Moles to micromoles | × 1,000,000 | umol = mol × 1,000,000 |
| Moles to molecules | × 6.02214076E+23 | molecules = mol × NA |
| Molecules to moles | ÷ 6.02214076E+23 | mol = molecules ÷ NA |
| Particles to moles | ÷ 6.02214076E+23 | mol = particles ÷ NA |
| Molar mass to moles | mass ÷ molar mass | mol = g ÷ (g/mol) |
| Molarity to moles | × volume | mol = M × L |
| Mole to mole ratio | × target coeff ÷ source coeff | target mol = given mol × b ÷ a |
Typical Use Cases
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Why do pages like Molecules to Moles create such huge or tiny numbers?
A: Moles, molecules, and atoms are separated by Avogadro-scale quantities, so the decimal shift can be dramatic even though the chemical amount is the same.
Q: What is a good checkpoint for Molecules to Moles?
A: 1E+18 molecules equals 0.000001660539 moles, which is a handy reminder of the scale difference between counted particles and amount-of-substance units.
Q: What does one mole really represent?
A: One mole represents a fixed number of entities. Depending in the converter, those entities might be atoms, molecules, or other particles.
Q: When do chemists switch between counted particles and moles?
A: This comes up in stoichiometry, gas-law work, solution prep, molecular counting, and any worksheet that needs a particle count linked to a chemical amount.
Q: How do I convert Moles back into Molecules?
A: molecules = mol × 6.02214076E+23. Use the reverse relationship when the value you already have is on the particle-count side or the mole side.
Q: Is this exact?
A: The calculation uses an exact factor.
References
- National Institute of Standards and Technology. CODATA Values of the Fundamental Physical Constants. Avogadro constant. https://www.nist.gov/programs-projects/codata-values-fundamental-physical-constants
