Atomic Mass of 118 Elements Explained- Chart, Calculations & Examples

Introduction: What is Atomic Mass?

Atomic mass is one of the most fundamental concepts in chemistry, yet many students and professionals need clarification. Simply put, the atomic mass of an element represents the average mass of its atoms, typically measured in atomic mass units (amu) or Daltons (Da).

This comprehensive guide will cover:
✔ What atomic mass really means
✔ How it differs from atomic weight and mass number
✔ How to calculate atomic mass
✔ A complete chart of atomic masses for all 118 elements
✔ Why atomic mass matters in real-world applications


Section 1: Understanding Atomic Mass Fundamentals

1.1 Definition of Atomic Mass

Atomic mass refers to:

  • The mass of a single atom

  • Measured in atomic mass units (amu)

  • 1 amu = 1/12th the mass of a carbon-12 atom

  • Accounts for protons + neutrons (electrons contribute negligibly)

Example: Hydrogen has an atomic mass of 1.008 amu

1.2 Atomic Mass vs. Other Key Terms

Concept Definition Example
Atomic Mass Mass of single atom Carbon = 12.01 amu
Atomic Weight Average mass of isotopes Chlorine = 35.45
Mass Number Protons + Neutrons in specific isotope Carbon-14 = 14

1.3 How Atomic Mass is Measured

Modern techniques include:

  • Mass spectrometry (most accurate)

  • X-ray crystallography

  • Neutron activation analysis


Section 2: The Complete Atomic Mass Chart (2024 IUPAC Values)

Here are the atomic masses for all 118 elements (simplified for readability):

Complete Atomic Mass Chart (118 Elements)

Atomic Number Element Symbol Atomic Mass (u)
1 Hydrogen H 1.008
2 Helium He 4.0026
3 Lithium Li 6.94
4 Beryllium Be 9.0122
5 Boron B 10.81
6 Carbon C 12.011
7 Nitrogen N 14.007
8 Oxygen O 15.999
9 Fluorine F 18.998
10 Neon Ne 20.180
11 Sodium Na 22.990
12 Magnesium Mg 24.305
13 Aluminum Al 26.982
14 Silicon Si 28.085
15 Phosphorus P 30.974
16 Sulfur S 32.06
17 Chlorine Cl 35.45
18 Argon Ar 39.948
19 Potassium K 39.098
20 Calcium Ca 40.078
21 Scandium Sc 44.956
22 Titanium Ti 47.867
23 Vanadium V 50.942
24 Chromium Cr 51.996
25 Manganese Mn 54.938
26 Iron Fe 55.845
27 Cobalt Co 58.933
28 Nickel Ni 58.693
29 Copper Cu 63.546
30 Zinc Zn 65.38
31 Gallium Ga 69.723
32 Germanium Ge 72.630
33 Arsenic As 74.922
34 Selenium Se 78.971
35 Bromine Br 79.904
36 Krypton Kr 83.798
37 Rubidium Rb 85.468
38 Strontium Sr 87.62
39 Yttrium Y 88.906
40 Zirconium Zr 91.224
41 Niobium Nb 92.906
42 Molybdenum Mo 95.95
43 Technetium Tc [98]
44 Ruthenium Ru 101.07
45 Rhodium Rh 102.91
46 Palladium Pd 106.42
47 Silver Ag 107.87
48 Cadmium Cd 112.41
49 Indium In 114.82
50 Tin Sn 118.71
51 Antimony Sb 121.76
52 Tellurium Te 127.60
53 Iodine I 126.90
54 Xenon Xe 131.29
55 Cesium Cs 132.91
56 Barium Ba 137.33
57 Lanthanum La 138.91
58 Cerium Ce 140.12
59 Praseodymium Pr 140.91
60 Neodymium Nd 144.24
61 Promethium Pm [145]
62 Samarium Sm 150.36
63 Europium Eu 151.96
64 Gadolinium Gd 157.25
65 Terbium Tb 158.93
66 Dysprosium Dy 162.50
67 Holmium Ho 164.93
68 Erbium Er 167.26
69 Thulium Tm 168.93
70 Ytterbium Yb 173.05
71 Lutetium Lu 174.97
72 Hafnium Hf 178.49
73 Tantalum Ta 180.95
74 Tungsten W 183.84
75 Rhenium Re 186.21
76 Osmium Os 190.23
77 Iridium Ir 192.22
78 Platinum Pt 195.08
79 Gold Au 196.97
80 Mercury Hg 200.59
81 Thallium Tl 204.38
82 Lead Pb 207.2
83 Bismuth Bi 208.98
84 Polonium Po [209]
85 Astatine At [210]
86 Radon Rn [222]
87 Francium Fr [223]
88 Radium Ra [226]
89 Actinium Ac [227]
90 Thorium Th 232.04
91 Protactinium Pa 231.04
92 Uranium U 238.03
93 Neptunium Np [237]
94 Plutonium Pu [244]
95 Americium Am [243]
96 Curium Cm [247]
97 Berkelium Bk [247]
98 Californium Cf [251]
99 Einsteinium Es [252]
100 Fermium Fm [257]
101 Mendelevium Md [258]
102 Nobelium No [259]
103 Lawrencium Lr [262]
104 Rutherfordium Rf [267]
105 Dubnium Db [270]
106 Seaborgium Sg [271]
107 Bohrium Bh [270]
108 Hassium Hs [277]
109 Meitnerium Mt [278]
110 Darmstadtium Ds [281]
111 Roentgenium Rg [282]
112 Copernicium Cn [285]
113 Nihonium Nh [286]
114 Flerovium Fl [289]
115 Moscovium Mc [290]
116 Livermorium Lv [293]
117 Tennessine Ts [294]
118 Oganesson Og [294]

Section 3: Calculating Atomic Mass – Step by Step

3.1 For Single Isotopes

Simple formula:

Atomic Mass ≈ Mass Number (protons + neutrons)

Example:

  • Oxygen-16 has 8 protons + 8 neutrons

  • Atomic mass ≈ 16 amu

3.2 For Elements with Isotopes

Use weighted average:

(Isotope Mass × Abundance) + (Isotope Mass × Abundance)...

Example for Chlorine:

  • Cl-35 (34.97 amu, 75.77%)

  • Cl-37 (36.97 amu, 24.23%)

  • Calculation:
    (34.97 × 0.7577) + (36.97 × 0.2423) = 35.45 amu


Section 4: Why Atomic Mass Matters

4.1 Practical Applications

  • Chemical reactions: Stoichiometry calculations

  • Medicine: Radioisotope dosing

  • Industry: Material science formulations

4.2 Common Misconceptions

❌ “Atomic mass is always a whole number”
✅ Truth: Most are decimals due to isotopes

❌ “Atomic mass and weight are identical”
✅ Truth: Weight considers isotopic distribution


Section 5: Special Cases & Exceptions

5.1 Elements with No Stable Isotopes

  • Technetium (Tc)

  • Promethium (Pm)

  • All elements beyond Bismuth (Bi)

5.2 Most Precise Measurements

  • Carbon-12: Exactly 12 amu (definition standard)

  • Silicon-28: Known to 10 decimal places


FAQs About Atomic Mass

Question. Why is atomic mass not a whole number?

Answer. Most elements have multiple isotopes with different neutron counts.

Question. Which element has the highest atomic mass?

Answer. Oganesson (Og) at 294 amu (synthetic element).

Question. How often do atomic mass values change?

Answer. IUPAC updates every 2 years based on new research.

Question. Can atomic mass be negative?

Answer. No – mass is always positive.


Conclusion & Learning Resources

Mastering atomic mass helps with:
✔ Balancing chemical equations
✔ Laboratory measurements
✔ Understanding periodic trends

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