How to convert to the number of sand and Nylon particles from mass

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around converting mass to the number of particles for sand and nylon, specifically focusing on the calculation of particle concentration and the implications of mass fraction versus concentration definitions.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Exploratory

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • The original poster attempts to verify their calculation of particle count per kilogram of sand and seeks confirmation from others. Participants question the definitions of concentration and mass fraction, suggesting that the exercise wording may be misleading.

Discussion Status

Participants are actively engaging in clarifying concepts related to concentration and mass fraction. Some guidance has been offered regarding the proper SI units for concentration, and there is an ongoing exploration of the implications of rounding in calculations.

Contextual Notes

There is mention of potential confusion regarding the definitions of concentration and mass fraction, as well as the impact of adding nylon particles to the total mass of the mixture. The original poster notes their rounding method and the accuracy of their calculations.

Skw
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Homework Statement
In a sample of 1 kg of sand, we add 108 g of Nylon particles (spherical) of diameter 15.5 µm. The concentration is therefore at 108 g/kg (w/w). How would you convert this concentration to express in number of particles/kg of sand ?
Relevant Equations
number of particles = (mass of all particles) / (mass of 1 particle)
mass of 1 particle = volume x density
density of Nylon = 1.14 g/cm3
Vsphere = (4/3)x π x r3
I calculate 4.8x10(^10) particles /kg of sand in the sample. Do you find the same ? Is my solution correct ? How many particles do you find ?
Thanks in advance !
 
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Hello @Skw,

:welcome:

are you rounding off in a specific manner ?

I do find the exercise wording a bit strange. Concentration is not mass fraction (and mass fraction is not 0.108 but 0.108/1.108). And I wouldn't call 'number of particles/kg of sand' a concentration either.

SI said:
The SI unit of concentration (of amount of substance) is the mole per cubic meter (mol/m3).

##\ ##
 
BvU said:
Concentration is not mass fraction (and mass fraction is not 0.108 but 0.108/1.108).
IMO we could be talking about the relative concentration/composition, in which the masses could be compared. However, the 0.108 figure doesn't take into account that adding the nylon particles to the sand increases the total quantity of stuff.
 
Hello @BvU, Hello @Mark44,

Thank you for your replies!

Ah ok thank you for the tip for the concentration in moles per cubic meter, I'll have a thought about it but it looks complicated.

Yes I was rounding to the third decimal (for simplicity) at intermediate stages, otherwise, a closer approximation would be 4.859 x10(^10) particles, so actually a more accurate final rounding to the first decimal would be 4.9 x10(^10) particles rather than 4.8x10(^10).

Do you find the same ?
 

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