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ChemistryChemistry7 weergaven·Bijgewerkt Jun 18, 2026·5 pagina's

Understanding Atomic Number and Mass Number

Every single element on the Periodic Table is made up...

1
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Understanding Atoms and Their Building Blocks

Think of an atom as the tiniest LEGO piece of any element - you literally can't get smaller than this and still have the element. Every atom is like a mini solar system with a dense centre called the nucleus surrounded by tiny particles whizzing around it.

Inside that nucleus, you've got protons (positively charged particles) and neutrons (particles with no charge at all). Flying around the outside are electrons - negatively charged particles that are so light they barely count towards the atom's weight.

Here's the brilliant bit: the atomic number is simply how many protons are packed into that nucleus. This number is like an element's fingerprint - every carbon atom has exactly 6 protons, every oxygen atom has exactly 8, and so on.

Quick Tip: The atomic number is what makes an element unique - change the number of protons, and you've got a completely different element!

2
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Decoding Atomic Notation

You'll see elements written in a special way that looks a bit like a fraction. The mass number (the bigger number) sits on top, the atomic number (smaller number) sits on the bottom, and the element symbol sits alongside them.

The mass number tells you the combined total of protons and neutrons in the nucleus. Since electrons weigh practically nothing, we just ignore them when calculating an atom's mass.

This notation system is your roadmap to understanding any atom. Once you can read it, you can figure out exactly what's inside any element's atom.

Remember: Mass number = protons + neutrons, whilst atomic number = protons only!

3
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Finding Protons, Electrons, and Neutrons

Finding protons is dead easy - it's always equal to the atomic number. If you see the atomic number is 11, you've got 11 protons. Job done.

Finding electrons in a neutral atom is just as simple. Since atoms normally have no overall charge, the positive charges (protons) must balance the negative charges (electrons). So electrons = protons = atomic number.

Finding neutrons needs one quick sum: neutrons = mass number - atomic number. If your mass number is 23 and your atomic number is 11, you've got 23 - 11 = 12 neutrons.

The APE MAN trick helps you remember: Atomic Number = Protons = Electrons, Mass Number - Atomic Number = Neutrons.

Exam Tip: Always double-check your neutron calculation - it's the one students mess up most often!

4
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Working Through Real Examples

Let's crack the code for Carbon-12: the mass number is 12, atomic number is 6. This means 6 protons, 6 electrons (same as protons), and 12 - 6 = 6 neutrons. Easy!

Sodium gets a bit trickier with a mass number of 23 and atomic number of 11. That gives us 11 protons, 11 electrons, and 23 - 11 = 12 neutrons.

Uranium-238 looks scary but follows the same pattern: 92 protons (from atomic number), 92 electrons, and a whopping 238 - 92 = 146 neutrons. The method never changes, regardless of how big the numbers get.

Confidence Booster: Once you've mastered these three examples, you can tackle any element on the Periodic Table!

5
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Key Points for Your Exams

The mass number is always the bigger number because it includes both protons and neutrons. The atomic number is smaller because it's just counting protons.

Here's something mind-blowing: atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons. These are called isotopes. Carbon-12 and Carbon-14 are both carbon (same protons), but they have different neutrons.

Remember that protons and neutrons have roughly the same mass and live in the nucleus, whilst electrons are practically weightless and orbit around the outside. The number of protons never changes for an element - if it did, you'd have a completely different element!

Final Reminder: Master the APE MAN formula and you'll never get stuck on atomic structure questions again!

We dachten al dat je dit zou vragen...

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Deze app is echt geweldig. Er zijn zoveel aantekeningen en hulpmiddelen [...]. Mijn probleemvak is bijvoorbeeld Frans, en de app heeft zoveel opties voor hulp. Dankzij deze app ben ik beter geworden in Frans. Ik zou het iedereen aanraden.

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AnnaiOS gebruiker

ChemistryChemistry7 weergaven·Bijgewerkt Jun 18, 2026·5 pagina's

Understanding Atomic Number and Mass Number

Every single element on the Periodic Table is made up of tiny atoms, and each atom has its own unique "ID card" made up of two special numbers. These atomic and mass numbers tell you exactly what's hiding inside any...

1
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Meld je aan om de inhoud te zien. Het is gratis!

  • Toegang tot alle documenten
  • Verbeter je cijfers
  • Sluit je aan bij miljoenen studenten

Understanding Atoms and Their Building Blocks

Think of an atom as the tiniest LEGO piece of any element - you literally can't get smaller than this and still have the element. Every atom is like a mini solar system with a dense centre called the nucleus surrounded by tiny particles whizzing around it.

Inside that nucleus, you've got protons (positively charged particles) and neutrons (particles with no charge at all). Flying around the outside are electrons - negatively charged particles that are so light they barely count towards the atom's weight.

Here's the brilliant bit: the atomic number is simply how many protons are packed into that nucleus. This number is like an element's fingerprint - every carbon atom has exactly 6 protons, every oxygen atom has exactly 8, and so on.

Quick Tip: The atomic number is what makes an element unique - change the number of protons, and you've got a completely different element!

2
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Meld je aan om de inhoud te zien. Het is gratis!

  • Toegang tot alle documenten
  • Verbeter je cijfers
  • Sluit je aan bij miljoenen studenten

Decoding Atomic Notation

You'll see elements written in a special way that looks a bit like a fraction. The mass number (the bigger number) sits on top, the atomic number (smaller number) sits on the bottom, and the element symbol sits alongside them.

The mass number tells you the combined total of protons and neutrons in the nucleus. Since electrons weigh practically nothing, we just ignore them when calculating an atom's mass.

This notation system is your roadmap to understanding any atom. Once you can read it, you can figure out exactly what's inside any element's atom.

Remember: Mass number = protons + neutrons, whilst atomic number = protons only!

3
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Meld je aan om de inhoud te zien. Het is gratis!

  • Toegang tot alle documenten
  • Verbeter je cijfers
  • Sluit je aan bij miljoenen studenten

Finding Protons, Electrons, and Neutrons

Finding protons is dead easy - it's always equal to the atomic number. If you see the atomic number is 11, you've got 11 protons. Job done.

Finding electrons in a neutral atom is just as simple. Since atoms normally have no overall charge, the positive charges (protons) must balance the negative charges (electrons). So electrons = protons = atomic number.

Finding neutrons needs one quick sum: neutrons = mass number - atomic number. If your mass number is 23 and your atomic number is 11, you've got 23 - 11 = 12 neutrons.

The APE MAN trick helps you remember: Atomic Number = Protons = Electrons, Mass Number - Atomic Number = Neutrons.

Exam Tip: Always double-check your neutron calculation - it's the one students mess up most often!

4
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Meld je aan om de inhoud te zien. Het is gratis!

  • Toegang tot alle documenten
  • Verbeter je cijfers
  • Sluit je aan bij miljoenen studenten

Working Through Real Examples

Let's crack the code for Carbon-12: the mass number is 12, atomic number is 6. This means 6 protons, 6 electrons (same as protons), and 12 - 6 = 6 neutrons. Easy!

Sodium gets a bit trickier with a mass number of 23 and atomic number of 11. That gives us 11 protons, 11 electrons, and 23 - 11 = 12 neutrons.

Uranium-238 looks scary but follows the same pattern: 92 protons (from atomic number), 92 electrons, and a whopping 238 - 92 = 146 neutrons. The method never changes, regardless of how big the numbers get.

Confidence Booster: Once you've mastered these three examples, you can tackle any element on the Periodic Table!

5
of 5
# Atomic Number and Mass
# Number

Introduction to atomic and mass numbers

Okay, so every element on the Periodic Table is made of tiny par

Meld je aan om de inhoud te zien. Het is gratis!

  • Toegang tot alle documenten
  • Verbeter je cijfers
  • Sluit je aan bij miljoenen studenten

Key Points for Your Exams

The mass number is always the bigger number because it includes both protons and neutrons. The atomic number is smaller because it's just counting protons.

Here's something mind-blowing: atoms of the same element can have different numbers of neutrons. These are called isotopes. Carbon-12 and Carbon-14 are both carbon (same protons), but they have different neutrons.

Remember that protons and neutrons have roughly the same mass and live in the nucleus, whilst electrons are practically weightless and orbit around the outside. The number of protons never changes for an element - if it did, you'd have a completely different element!

Final Reminder: Master the APE MAN formula and you'll never get stuck on atomic structure questions again!

We dachten al dat je dit zou vragen...

Wat is de Knowunity AI companion?

Onze AI Companion is een studentgerichte AI-tool die meer biedt dan alleen antwoorden. Gebouwd op miljoenen Knowunity bronnen, biedt het relevante informatie, gepersonaliseerde studieplannen, quizzes en inhoud direct in de chat, aangepast aan jouw individuele leertraject.

Waar kan ik de Knowunity-app downloaden?

Je kunt de app downloaden via Google Play Store en Apple App Store.

Is Knowunity echt gratis?

Dat klopt! Geniet van gratis toegang tot leerinhoud, maak contact met medestudenten en krijg directe hulp – alles binnen handbereik.

Kan je niet vinden wat je zoekt? Ontdek andere vakken.

Studenten zijn dol op ons — en jij ook.

4.6/5App Store
4.7/5Google Play

De app is heel makkelijk te gebruiken en goed ontworpen. Ik heb tot nu toe alles kunnen vinden waar ik naar zocht en heb veel kunnen leren van de presentaties! Ik ga de app zeker gebruiken voor een schoolopdracht! En natuurlijk helpt het ook veel als inspiratie.

Stefan SiOS gebruiker

Deze app is echt geweldig. Er zijn zoveel aantekeningen en hulpmiddelen [...]. Mijn probleemvak is bijvoorbeeld Frans, en de app heeft zoveel opties voor hulp. Dankzij deze app ben ik beter geworden in Frans. Ik zou het iedereen aanraden.

Samantha KlichAndroid gebruiker

Wow, ik ben echt onder de indruk. Ik probeerde de app gewoon omdat ik hem vaak geadverteerd had gezien en was absoluut verbaasd. Deze app is DE HULP die je wilt voor school en bovenal biedt hij zoveel dingen, zoals oefeningen en factsheets, die mij persoonlijk HEEL erg hebben geholpen.

AnnaiOS gebruiker