Silver Nitrate Formula – Interesting Facts

How to Make your own Silver Nitrate Standard Solutions

Chemical Formula Configuration Chemical Makeup Atomic Weights
AgNO3 Silver Nitrate Formula Silver – Ag [1]
Nitrogen – N [1]
Oxygen – O [3]
107.8682 grams
14.0067 grams
47.9982 grams
  Total: 169.8731 grams

 
1 Mole of Silver Nitrate
1 Mole of Silver
1 Mole of Nitrogen
3 Moles of Oxygen [ Note: 1 Mole of Oxygen = 15.9994 grams (about 13.5 Cubic Feet!) ]
From the table above, we can see that 1 Mole of Silver Nitrate weighs about 169.87 grams.
You can then say that the Formula Weight of Silver Nitrate is 169.87 grams.
Note: The terms: Formula Weight and Molecular Weight are the same thing.

 

What is a MOLE?
A Mole is the standard unit of measure in Chemistry (like a Gallon is to Gasoline).
One Mole is 6.02 times 1023 atoms -or- molecules (groups of atoms).

 

Interesting Fact:
Silver Nitrate has a Density of 4.35 grams per Cubic Centimeter (when compressed)
Silver Nitrate has a Density of 2.21 grams per Cubic Centimeter (in powder form)
So, if 1 Mole of Silver Nitrate weighs 169.87 grams,
1 Mole of Silver Nitrate has a Volume of [ 169.87 / 4.35 ] -or- 39.05 Cubic Centimeters

Even More Interesting is This:
Silver Nitrate contains 4 Moles of gasses. [ 1 Mole Nitrogen + 3 Moles Oxygen ]
4 Moles of gasses normally occupy 13.5 Cubic Feet per Mole

So: 13.5 Cubic Feet times 4 = 54 Cubic Feet
So: 54 Cubic Feet converts to: 1,529,109 Cubic Centimeters (404 Gallons)
So: The gasses in 1 Mole of Silver Nitrate have shrunk from:
1,529,109 Cubic Centimeters down to 39.05 Cubic Centimeters!
(1,529,109 / 39.05) = 39,157 Times – This is AMAZING!
In English: 404 Gallons of Gasses shrunk to: 0.0103159 Gallons!
In English: 404 Gallons of Gasses shrunk to: 8 teaspoons!