Relative Atomic Mass (Oxford AQA IGCSE Chemistry)

Revision Note

Richard Boole

Expertise

Chemistry

Relative Atomic Mass

  • Relative atomic mass has the symbol Ar

  • This is the average mass of the atoms of an element measured relative to carbon-12 

  • For example:

    • Carbon has an Ar of 12 and hydrogen has an Ar of 1 on the periodic table

    • So, 1 atom of carbon has the same mass as 12 atoms of hydrogen

Comparing hydrogen and carbon

The diagram shows that 12 atoms of hydrogen have the same mass as one atom of carbon
Relative atomic mass compares atoms of other elements with carbon-12

Exam Tip

  • Defining relative atomic mass is a common exam question.

  • The best answers work through the term backwards and include the required extra detail:

    1. Mass - the average mass

    2. Atomic - of an atom

    3. Relative - compared to carbon-12

  • The relative atomic mass of any element is shown on the periodic table

  • The mass number that is shown on the periodic table is an average value of all the isotopes of an element

    • This is calculated from the mass number and relative abundances of all the isotopes of a particular element

  • The isotopes of carbon are carbon-12, carbon-13 and carbon-14

    • But, the percentage of carbon-12 is so high that the average value of all isotopes shown on the periodic table is 12

Using isotopes for the Ar of carbon

The graph shows that carbon exists as 98.9% carbon-12, 1.1% carbon-13 and less than 0.0001% carbon-14
The percentage of the carbon isotopes
  • The isotopes of chlorine are chlorine-35 and chlorine-37

    • The percentage of chlorine-35 is roughly three quarters of all chlorine atoms

    • So, the average value of all chlorine atoms shown on the periodic table is 35.5

Using isotopes for the Ar of chlorine

The graph shows that roughly 75% of all chlorine isotopes are chlorine-35 and the remaining 25% are chlorine-37
The percentage of chlorine isotopes

Exam Tip

You will not be asked to use isotopes and their abundances to calculate values for relative atomic mass.

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Richard Boole

Author: Richard Boole

Richard has taught Chemistry for over 15 years as well as working as a science tutor, examiner, content creator and author. He wasn’t the greatest at exams and only discovered how to revise in his final year at university. That knowledge made him want to help students learn how to revise, challenge them to think about what they actually know and hopefully succeed; so here he is, happily, at SME.