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  2. Molar mass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molar_mass

    Molar mass is closely related to the relative molar mass (M r) of a compound and to the standard atomic weights of its constituent elements. However, it should be distinguished from the molecular mass (which is confusingly also sometimes known as molecular weight), which is the mass of one molecule (of any single isotopic composition), and to ...

  3. Molecular mass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molecular_mass

    The molecular mass and relative molecular mass are distinct from but related to the molar mass. The molar mass is defined as the mass of a given substance divided by the amount of the substance, and is expressed in grams per mol (g/mol). That makes the molar mass an average of many particles or molecules (potentially containing different ...

  4. Molar mass constant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molar_mass_constant

    The molar mass constant is important in writing dimensionally correct equations. [4] While one may informally say "the molar mass M of an element has the same numerical value as its atomic weight A ", the atomic weight (relative atomic mass) A is a dimensionless quantity, whereas the molar mass M has the SI base unit of kilogram per mole but is ...

  5. Amount of substance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amount_of_substance

    Historically, the mole was defined as the amount of substance in 12 grams of the carbon-12 isotope.As a consequence, the mass of one mole of a chemical compound, in grams, is numerically equal (for all practical purposes) to the mass of one molecule or formula unit of the compound, in daltons, and the molar mass of an isotope in grams per mole is approximately equal to the mass number ...

  6. Molar mass distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molar_mass_distribution

    The number average molar mass is a way of determining the molecular mass of a polymer.Polymer molecules, even ones of the same type, come in different sizes (chain lengths, for linear polymers), so the average molecular mass will depend on the method of averaging.

  7. Dispersity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dispersity

    A uniform polymer (often referred to as a monodisperse polymer) is composed of molecules of the same mass. [5] Nearly all natural polymers are uniform. [6] Synthetic near-uniform polymer chains can be made by processes such as anionic polymerization, a method using an anionic catalyst to produce chains that are similar in length.

  8. Multiangle light scattering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiangle_light_scattering

    As MALS can provide molar mass and size of molecules, it permits study into protein-protein binding, oligomerization and the kinetics of self-assembly, association and dissociation. By comparing the molar mass of a sample to its concentration, one can determine the binding affinity and stoichiometry of interacting molecules.

  9. Talk:Molar mass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Molar_mass

    Molar mass is the mass of one mole of a chemical element or chemical compound. In SI, the unit is kg/mol. The molar mass can be obtained from the relative molecular mass (still often called erroneously molecular weight and abbreviated by MW) multiplying it by 0.001 kg/mol. there is no element called the dalton is there, it is just a unit of measurement isn't it?