Units Question: Avagadro's Constant

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Avogadro's constant is often expressed in units of mol-1, which some find uninformative, as it represents the number of particles in a mole. The discussion explores alternative interpretations, such as viewing it as a conversion factor between grams and atomic mass units (amu), and the idea that it could be treated as a unitless number. Participants note that while mols can be seen as scaling factors, chemists sometimes treat them as units for clarity. The conversation also touches on the conventions of expressing quantities in chemistry, emphasizing that while counts of things are typically unitless, specifying units can aid in ensuring accurate calculations. Overall, the treatment of Avogadro's constant reflects a blend of mathematical convention and practical application in chemistry.
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Generally, I see Avogadro's constant being given with units mol-1. Now to me that doesn't seem very... descriptive. But as they say there's more than one way to skin the cat, so I was wondering if these other ways of thinking of it are correct:
  • The conversion factor from grams to amu. The mass of an atom/molecule in amu divide by Avogadro's constant is it's mass in grams?
  • Molar mass is the ratio of of mass per particle? IE: amu/particle, 12amu/particle for carbon
  • Equivalently, Avogadro's Constant is the number of particles in a mol, so rather than mol-1 it's particles*mol-1?
  • There is an invisible unit in A's constant we just don't bother writing?

Whenever I do math with Avogadro's constant my numbers seem to come out, but I guess I just never wrapped my head around it all the way.
 
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And also in general, whenever we have something that represents the number of things, we don't bother writing a unit for the number of things? Is there a reason for that?
 
In general counts of things are unitless. So, number density (for example) has units of m-3, rather than particles (or things) per cubic meter. I'm not completely sure why this is, but it's definitely consistent across a pretty wide range of applications.
 
Mols are not units. They are a scaling factor. So technically, Avogadro's number is unitless. It's just a number. I mean, you don't ask what units Pi has. It's a number.

But sometimes, chemists like to treat mol as a unit. In that case, you write Avogadro's number as mol-1. But that's just silly chemists being silly.
 
To add to what cjl wrote: Hz is a number of events per sec - but it is given as s-1, that is, "event" is unitless. Same convention.
 
Perhaps someone would explain to me how you can do themodynamics without using the mol as a unit?

Would the entropy or enthalpy of fusion be dependent upon the number of mols present?

Of course in the old days we used to call them gram-moles.
 
Studiot said:
Perhaps someone would explain to me how you can do themodynamics without using the mol as a unit?
By using N instead of n and kB instead of R. E.g. PV = nRT = NkBT, where N is total number of particles. Like I said, it's just a scaling factor.
 
What does PV=NRT have to do with the enthalpy or entropy of fusion ?
 
FireStorm000 said:
Generally, I see Avogadro's constant being given with units mol-1. Now to me that doesn't seem very... descriptive. But as they say there's more than one way to skin the cat, so I was wondering if these other ways of thinking of it are correct:
.
.
.
In practice, I prefer to either have no units on Avogadro's number, or to make the units be particles/mole. Here, "particles" means the number of particles (atoms, molecules, or whatever particle or thing is implied by context).

FireStorm000 said:
And also in general, whenever we have something that represents the number of things, we don't bother writing a unit for the number of things? Is there a reason for that?
Because it's just a number. Still, it is sometimes helpful to include "things" as the unit in order to double check that the calculation was done properly, especially when there is more than 1 type of thing involved in the problem.

Example: how many electrons are there in 2.5 grams of helium?

Solution:
\rm 2.5 \ g \ \cdot \ \frac{1 \ mol \ He}{4.0 \ g} \ \cdot \ 6.02 \cdot 10^{23} \frac{He \ atoms}{1 \ mol \ He} \ \cdot \ 2 \frac{electrons}{He \ atom} \ = \ xxx \ electrons
 
  • #10
Borek said:
To add to what cjl wrote: Hz is a number of events per sec - but it is given as s-1, that is, "event" is unitless. Same convention.
I prefer to specify what the event is ... is it 1 cycle, or 1 radian?
 
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  • #11
Studiot said:
What does PV=NRT have to do with the enthalpy or entropy of fusion ?

Instead of using kilo Joules per mol for enthalpy of fusion, couldn't you use kilo Joules for every so many particles of that substance (I know I'm really just saying the same thing)? When you use mol for enthalpy of fusion, it is understood that you are saying these many kilo Joules required for these many particles. It's just a matter of convention.
 
  • #12
Redbelly98 said:
I prefer to specify what the event is ... is it 1 cycle, or 1 radian?

I never said I like this convention.
 
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