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QUESTION

# An Avogadro's number (1 mol) of sugar molecules has a mass Of 342 g, but an Avogadro's number (1 mol) of water molecules has a mass of 1 mol of sugar and the mass of 1 mol of water

Here's why that is the case.

First of all, it's always a good idea to start with what a mole actually means, that way you can be sure that you know what you're looking at here.

Atoms and molecules are very, very small, which of course implies that they have very, very small masses, much, much smaller than the scale we're used to in our daily lives.

In order to be able to convert this molecular scale to something that's more familiar to us, like grams, we needed to group a whole lot of these molecules together.

So, how many molecules do we need in order to have "a whole lot"? Avogadro's number, 6.022 * 10^(23). This is what a mole actually means, a very, very large collection of molecules.

So, in order to have a mole of sugar, for example, you need to have 6.022 * 10^(23) molecules of sugar. Likewise, in order to have have one mole of water, you need to have 6.022 * 10^(23) molecules of water.

So, why does one mole of sugar weight more than one mole of water?

Because an individual molecule of sugar weighs more than an individual molecule of water.

Sugar, which is the common name used for sucrose, has the chemical formula "C"_12"H"_22"O"_11. Notice that one molecule of sucrose contains

• 12 atoms of carbon
• 22 atoms of hydrogen
• 11 atoms of oxygen

Water has the chemical formula "H"_2"O" and it contains

• 2 atoms of hydrogen
• 1 atom of oxygen

So one molecule of water will have a smaller mass than one molecule of sugar, since it contains fewer atoms.

This of course means that two molecules of water will have a smaller mass than two molecules of sugar.

The same goes for 10 molecules of each substance, 100, 1000, and 6.022 * 10^(23).

This is why one mole of sugar has a bigger mass than one mole of water, because one molecule of sugar has a bigger mass than one molecule of water.