emilmammadzada said:
Dear expert, can you explain with the example I asked? Just showing the formulation will be enough for me to understand.This subject seems complicated to me, I have a little insufficient knowledge of chemistry.I would be happy if you could explain the question I asked or a simple chemistry example.
Does one know how to convert from mass (g) to moles (g-mole) to atoms? Is one familiar with Avogadro's number, 6.022×10
23 atoms/g-mole?
Density is just mass/volume (g/cm
3). To find the number of moles per unit volume, one multiplies by the number moles per unit mass, which is just the atomic or molecular mass.
If I have 239 grams of
239Pu, then I have 1 mole of
239Pu, since the atomic mass is 239 amu. To convert that to atoms, one multiplies by Avogadro's number, to obtain the number atoms in the mass.
It is more complicated when there are isotopes involved, since Pu is usually some combination of Pu-239, -240, -241, -242 and possibly some -243, and U is predominately U-238 with some U-235, depending on enrichment. So one might have Pu with an atomic mass of 239.6 and U with an atomic mass of 237.85.
In the OP example, one has to determine the moles of PuO
2 and UO
2 in the mixture, using the steps above, then use the stoichiometric value of 2 moles of O per 1 mole of U or Pu. I have given the density for the oxides in a previous post.