mole fraction | |
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Other names | molar fraction, amount fraction, amount-of-substance fraction |
Common symbols | x |
SI unit | 1 |
Other units | mol/mol |
In chemistry, the mole fraction or molar fraction, also called mole proportion or molar proportion, is a quantity defined as the ratio between the amount of a constituent substance, ni (expressed in unit of moles, symbol mol), and the total amount of all constituents in a mixture, ntot (also expressed in moles):[1]
It is denoted xi (lowercase Roman letter x), sometimes χi (lowercase Greek letter chi).[2][3] (For mixtures of gases, the letter y is recommended.[1][4])
It is a dimensionless quantity with dimension of and dimensionless unit of moles per mole (mol/mol or mol ⋅ mol-1) or simply 1; metric prefixes may also be used (e.g., nmol/mol for 10-9).[5] When expressed in percent, it is known as the mole percent or molar percentage (unit symbol %, sometimes "mol%", equivalent to cmol/mol for 10-2). The mole fraction is called amount fraction by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC)[1] and amount-of-substance fraction by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).[6] This nomenclature is part of the International System of Quantities (ISQ), as standardized in ISO 80000-9,[4] which deprecates "mole fraction" based on the unacceptability of mixing information with units when expressing the values of quantities.[6]
The sum of all the mole fractions in a mixture is equal to 1:
Mole fraction is numerically identical to the number fraction, which is defined as the number of particles (molecules) of a constituent Ni divided by the total number of all molecules Ntot. Whereas mole fraction is a ratio of amounts to amounts (in units of moles per moles), molar concentration is a quotient of amount to volume (in units of moles per litre). Other ways of expressing the composition of a mixture as a dimensionless quantity are mass fraction and volume fraction are others.