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C-12 and c-13 are naturally occurring isotopes of the element carbon. c-12 occurs 98.89% of the time and c-13 occurs 1.108% of the time. what calculation should be used to determine the atomic mass of this element?

User MikePR
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2 Answers

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w₁(¹²C)=0.9889 (98.89%)
w₂(¹³C)=0.01108 (1.108%)
A(¹²C)=12
A(¹³C)=13

A(C)=w₁A(¹²C)+w₂A(¹³C)

A(C)=0.9889*12+0.01108*13=12.01084 a.m.u.
User Neisha
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Answer:

We will determine the weighted average of the atomic mass of two isotopes.

Step-by-step explanation:

The atomic mass of an element is the weighted average of atomic masses of the most abundant isotopes occur in nature.

Given:

Percentage abundance of C-12 : 98.89%

Percentage abundance of C-13: 1.108%

The atomic mass of carbon will be"


atomicmass=(percentageofC12Xatomicmass+percentageofC13Xatomicmass)/(100)

Atomic mass =
(98.89X12+1.108X13)/(100)=12.101g/mol

User Godaygo
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