Fluorine Atomic Mass

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CHEBI:36939 - fluorine-18 atom

Fluorine is the most electronegative and reactive of all elements. It is a pale yellow, corrosive gas, which reacts with most organic and inorganic substances. Finely divided metals, glass, ceramics, carbon, and even water burn in fluorine with a bright flame. Until World War II, there was no commercial production of elemental fluorine. Basic Information Atomic Structure Isotopes Related Links Citing This Page. Basic Information Name: Fluorine Symbol: F Atomic Number: 9 Atomic Mass: 18.998404 amu Melting Point:-219.62 °C (53.530006 K, -363.31598 °F) Boiling Point:-188.14 °C (85.01 K, -306.652 °F) Number of Protons/Electrons: 9 Number of Neutrons: 10 Classification: Halogen.

Element Fluorine (F), Group 17, Atomic Number 9, p-block, Mass 18.998. Sources, facts, uses, scarcity (SRI), podcasts, alchemical symbols, videos and images. Atomic Mass of Fluorine Atomic mass of Fluorine is 18.9984 u. The atomic mass is the mass of an atom. The atomic mass or relative isotopic mass refers to the mass of a single particle, and therefore is tied to a certain specific isotope of an element.

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ChEBI Name fluorine-18 atom
ChEBI ID CHEBI:36939
Definition The radioactive isotope of fluorine with relative atomic mass 18.000938. The longest-lived fluorine radionuclide with half-life of 109.77 min.
Stars This entity has been manually annotated by the ChEBI Team.
Supplier Information
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Formula [18F]
Net Charge 0
Average Mass 18.001
Monoisotopic Mass 18.00094
InChIInChI=1S/F/i1-1
InChIKeyYCKRFDGAMUMZLT-BJUDXGSMSA-N
SMILES[18F]
Roles Classification
Biological Role(s):micronutrient
Any nutrient required in small quantities by organisms throughout their life in order to orchestrate a range of physiological functions.
(via fluorine atom )
View more via ChEBI Ontology
ChEBI Ontology
Outgoing fluorine-18 atom (CHEBI:36939) is a fluorine atom (CHEBI:24061)
Incoming fluorine-18 molecular entity (CHEBI:49133) has part fluorine-18 atom (CHEBI:36939)
IUPAC Name
fluorine-18
Synonyms Sources
189F IUPAC
18F IUPAC
fluorine, isotope of mass 18 ChemIDplus
fluorine-18 ChEBI
Registry Number Type Source
13981-56-1 CAS Registry Number ChemIDplus
Last Modified
05 March 2010

Molar mass of F2O2 = 69.9956064 g/mol

Convert grams Fluorine Dioxide to moles or moles Fluorine Dioxide to grams

Molecular weight calculation:
18.9984032*2 + 15.9994*2


Symbol# of AtomsOxygenO15.9994245.715%
FluorineF18.9984032254.285%


Atomic Number Fluorine

Fluorine

In chemistry, the formula weight is a quantity computed by multiplying the atomic weight (in atomic mass units) of each element in a chemical formula by the number of atoms of that element present in the formula, then adding all of these products together.

A common request on this site is to convert grams to moles. To complete this calculation, you have to know what substance you are trying to convert. The reason is that the molar mass of the substance affects the conversion. This site explains how to find molar mass.

If the formula used in calculating molar mass is the molecular formula, the formula weight computed is the molecular weight. The percentage by weight of any atom or group of atoms in a compound can be computed by dividing the total weight of the atom (or group of atoms) in the formula by the formula weight and multiplying by 100.

Finding molar mass starts with units of grams per mole (g/mol). When calculating molecular weight of a chemical compound, it tells us how many grams are in one mole of that substance. The formula weight is simply the weight in atomic mass units of all the atoms in a given formula.

Fluorine Atomic Mass

The atomic weights used on this site come from NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology. We use the most common isotopes. This is how to calculate molar mass (average molecular weight), which is based on isotropically weighted averages. This is not the same as molecular mass, which is the mass of a single molecule of well-defined isotopes. For bulk stoichiometric calculations, we are usually determining molar mass, which may also be called standard atomic weight or average atomic mass.

Using the chemical formula of the compound and the periodic table of elements, we can add up the atomic weights and calculate molecular weight of the substance.

Atomic Structure Fluorine

Formula weights are especially useful in determining the relative weights of reagents and products in a chemical reaction. These relative weights computed from the chemical equation are sometimes called equation weights.





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