Molar mass constant


The molar mass constant, usually denoted as, is a physical constant defined as of the molar mass of carbon-12:, where. The molar mass of a substance is its relative atomic mass or relative molecular mass multiplied by the molar mass constant.
The mole and the dalton were originally defined in the International System of Units in such a way that the constant was exactly, which made the numerical value of the molar mass of a substance, in grams per mole, equal to the average mass of its constituent particles relative to the atomic mass constant,, where. Thus, for example, the average molecular mass of water is approximately, making the mass of one mole of water approximately.
On 20 May 2019, the SI definition of the mole changed in such a way that the molar mass constant remains very close to but is no longer exactly equal to it. According to the SI, the value of now depends on the mass of a carbon-12 atom in grams, which must be determined experimentally. The CODATA recommended value of the molar mass constant is:
This is equal to, with a relative deviation of about a part per billion from the former defined value, which is larger than its uncertainty but still small enough to be negligible for practical purposes.
The molar mass constant is important in writing dimensionally correct equations. While one may informally say "the molar mass of an element is equal to its relative atomic mass expressed in grams per mole", the relative atomic mass is a dimensionless quantity, whereas the molar mass has the SI coherent unit of kg/mol but is usually given in g/mol or kg/kmol. Formally, is times the molar mass constant :.

Prior to 2019 revision

The molar mass constant was unusual among physical constants by having an exactly defined value rather than being measured experimentally. From the old definition of the mole, the molar mass of carbon-12,, was exactly 12 g/mol. From the definition of relative atomic mass, the relative atomic mass of carbon-12,, is exactly 12. The molar mass constant was thus given by:
The molar mass constant was related to the mass of a carbon-12 atom,, in grams:
While the molar mass constant had a fixed value, the value of the atomic mass of carbon-12 in grams was dependent on the accuracy and precision of the Avogadro constant.

Post-2019 revision

Because the 2019 revision of the SI redefined the mole and gave the Avogadro constant an exact numerical value when expressed in terms of the mole, the value of the molar mass constant is no longer fixed. The molar mass constant is now dependent on the experimentally determined atomic mass of carbon-12,, in grams:
One consequence of this change is that the previously defined relationship between the mass of the 12C atom, the dalton, the kilogram, and the Avogadro number is no longer exact. One of the following had to change:
  • The mass of a 12C atom is exactly 12 daltons.
  • The number of daltons in a gram is exactly equal to the Avogadro number: i.e.,.
The wording of the 9th SI Brochure implies that the first statement remains valid, which means the second is no longer exactly true. The molar mass constant is still very close to, but no longer exactly equal to it. Appendix 2 to the 9th SI Brochure states that "the molar mass of carbon 12,, is equal to within a relative standard uncertainty equal to that of the recommended value of at the time this Resolution was adopted, namely, and that in the future its value will be determined experimentally", which makes no reference to the dalton and is consistent with either statement.
For a substance consisting of entities, molar mass,, is the ratio of substance mass,, and substance amount, :. Substance mass is an aggregate of atomic-scale entity masses:. Substance amount is an aggregate of atomic-scale entities:, where is an elementary amount consisting of exactly one entity. In terms of the atomic-scale mass unit, the dalton, Da. In terms of the atomic-scale unit for amount of substance, the entity, 1 ent. So molar mass is, the entity mass per entity, which is self-evident. And this can be written Da/ent, where the molar mass constant is exactly one dalton per entity, and this is not affected by the 2019 base unit redefinitions. Before the redefinition of the mole, one dalton per entity was exactly equal to one gram per mole. Although the dalton per entity is no longer exactly equal to one gram per mole, for all practical purposes in stoichiometry, we can write: Da/ent = g/mol = kg/kmol, relating atomic-scale and macroscopic units for molar mass.