Percent Composition & Average Atomic Mass (AAM) Assume a new element E has 3 isotopes; E-a, E-b, E-c a,b,c are the mass numbers of each isotope (or aE, bE, cE) A sample of E contains the following isotopes: (E is the ‘element’, not an isotope) aE = x grams = y grams cE = z grams bE The total amount of the sample = x+y+z sumxyz = x+y+z Percent Composition Percent of aE = x (x+y+z) x 100; the value is in % (% aE); y Percent of bE = (x+y+z) x 100; the value is in %; (% bE); z Percent of cE = (x+y+z) x 100; the value is in %; (% cE); x (x+y+z) y (x+y+z) z (x+y+z) gives the decimal form gives the decimal form gives the decimal form NOTE: Any time you multiply a decimal by 100, you get % To convert % decimal, divide % by 100 (% aE) + (% bE) + (% cE) = 100 (or extremely close) x (x+y+z) + y z (x+y+z) + (x+y+z) = 1 (or extremely close) Average Atomic Mass of E (AAM) Given: (AMI is atomic mass of the isotope) a AMI of E = q AMI of bE = r AMI of cE = s x AAM = q * (x+y+z) + y r * (x+y+z) + s * z (x+y+z) Final Check: The AAM will be between the lowest & highest AMI If it doesn’t, you did something wrong. Note: I used 3 isotopes… there could be only 2, there could be more. Depends on the element & the number of naturally occurring isotopes in the given problem © 2022 David Lerner, ITutorMathandScience.com