Transcript for:
Calculating Moles of Glucose from Mass

we are asked to calculate the number of moles in a 1.52 kilogram sample of glucose so like always pause this video and try to figure this out on your own and this periodic table of elements will prove useful all right now if we're trying to figure out the number of moles remember mole is a really you could view it as a quantity of something if i said a dozen of something you'd say oh that's 12 of that thing if i say a mole of something i'm saying that's avogadro's number of that thing and so we have a 1.52 kilogram sample of our molecule in question of glucose so if we can figure out the mass per mole or in other words think about it the molar mass of glucose well then we just divide the mass of our sample by the mass per mole and we'll know how many moles we have so what is the molar mass of glucose well to figure that out and that's why this periodic table of elements is useful we just have to figure out the molar mass of the constituent elements so if we first look at carbon carbon we see from this periodic table of elements has a molar mass of 12.01 grams per mole we've talked about in other videos you could view this 12.01 as the relative atomic mass of a carbon atom of as the average atomic mass of a carbon atom or what's useful and this is where avogadro's number is valuable if you have avogadro's number of carbons it is going to have a mass of 12.01 grams so carbon has a molar mass of 12.01 grams per mole and now we can think about hydrogen in the same way hydrogen has a molar mass of 1.008 grams per mole 008 grams per mole and then last but not least we have oxygen here oxygen we can see from our periodic table of elements it has a molar mass of 16.00 grams per mole and so now we have all the information we need from our periodic table of elements so the molar mass of glucose is going to be six times the molar mass of carbon plus 12 times the molar mass of hydrogen plus six times the molar mass of oxygen so it's going to be six times 12.01 grams per mole plus 12 times 1.008 grams per mole plus every molecule of glucose has 6 oxygens plus 6 times 16.00 grams per mole 6 times 12.01 plus 12 times 1.008 plus 6 times 16 is equal to and if we're thinking about significant figures here the molar mass of hydrogen goes to the thousands place but we only go to the hundredths for carbon and for oxygen we're adding all these up together so it's going to be 180 point i can only go to the hundredths place for significant figures so 180.16 so that's equal to 180.16 grams per mole and we could say grams of glucose c6h12o6 per mole of glucose c6h12o6 and then we can use this 1.52 kilograms to figure out how many moles we have so if we start off with 1.522 kilograms of glucose so that's c6h12o6 well first we can convert it to grams because here our molar mass is given in terms of grams so times we're going to want kilograms in the denominator and grams in the numerator so how many grams are there per kilogram well we have 1000 grams for every one kilogram so when you multiply these two out this is going to give you the number of grams we have of glucose which would be 1520 and if you have your mass in terms of grams you can then divide by your molar mass or you could view it as multiplying it by the moles per gram so for every one mole of glucose c6h12o6 we have 180.16 grams of glucose c c 6 h 12 o 6 and this is going to get us we get 1.52 times 1 000 is equal to this is the number of grams of glucose we have and then we're going to divide by 180.16 divide by 180.16 gives us this number and let's see if we see significant figures we have three significant figures here we have five here so we want to round it to three significant figures so it will be 8.44 moles of glucose so our kilograms cancel with our kilograms and then our grams of glucose cancel with our grams of glucose and we are left with 8.44 moles of glucose moles of c6h12o6 and we are done