Moles are a unit of measurement for chemicals, in a way feet is a measurement unit for length and pound for weight. When a chemist wishes to make a chemical reaction happen, he or she wants to make sure there is the right amount of each kind of chemical. Moles are used so that chemists know how much of different kinds of chemicals to use to have reactions that work out correctly. A chemical can be atoms of a single element or atoms of many elements combined into molecules, so a single molecule of a chemical can weigh three or four times what a single molecule of another chemical weighs. For this reason, chemists can't just measure the weight of different chemicals to have the right proportions of reactants.
When chemists want to have a chemical reaction come out they need to know how many molecules of each kind of chemical they have, so they measure the chemicals in moles. A mole is the atomic weight of a molecule of the chemical in grams. So a mole of a molecule like hydrogen (H) with an atomic weight of 1 is one gram. Meanwhile, a complex molecule like glucose (C6H12O6) has an atomic weight of 180, so one mole is 180 grams. But even though the weight is different, the two moles contain the exact same number of molecules, 6.02 x 10 to the 23rd power.
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