Nominal mass: Difference between revisions
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Mass of an ion or molecule calculated using the mass of the most abundant isotope of each element rounded to the nearest integer value and equivalent to the sum of the [[mass number]]s of all constituent atoms. | Mass of an ion or molecule calculated using the mass of the most abundant isotope of each element rounded to the nearest integer value and equivalent to the sum of the [[mass number]]s of all constituent atoms. | ||
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== See also == | |||
*[[Mass]] | |||
{{Disc}} | {{Disc}} | ||
{{DiscDef}} | {{DiscDef}} | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 15:48, 19 July 2009
Obsolete Template
See also
See additional comments on the Nominal mass discussion page (archive of discussion between 2004 and 2006) |
See proposed definition on the Nominal mass discussion page. |
External links
- The mass of an ion containing the most abundant isotopes, calculated with nominal atomic weights.??????????????
- The nominal mass of an ion is calculated by simply adding the integer masses of the lightest isotopes of all elements contributing to the molecule, e.g. to calculate the nominal mass of CH3Br you have to use the nominal masses of 12C, 1H, and 79Br to obtain Mnomi = 94 amu
- Same meaning as mass number (Nearest integer when expressing the mass of an atom in units that define 12C as 12. The number is approximately the sum of protons and neutrons in the atomic nucleus. In mass analysis the mass number is the sum of the masses of the atoms making up an ion or other particle (12C = 12, 1H = 1, 16O = 16, 14N = 14...))