Chemistry, asked by sraddhavaranasi22, 1 year ago

Are Atomic radius and Atomic volume same?? If not how are they different!??​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Atomic radius and atomic volume are NOT the same. Atomic radius is the radius of the atom. Atomic volume is the volume occupied by the atom. Units of atomic radius include: metre, micro metre, nano metre, etc. Units of atomic volume include: cm^3(centimeter cube), m^3 (metre cube), etc.

Answered by XxShreexX
9

Explanation:

Hey ❤

\bold{Atomic\:Radius}

✦ Atomic radius is generally stated as being the total distance from an atom’s nucleus to the outermost orbital of electron. In simpler terms, it can be defined as something similar to the radius of a circle, where the center of the circle is the nucleus and the outer edge of the circle is the outermost orbital of electron. As you begin to move across or down the periodic table, trends emerge that help explain how atomic radii change.

\bold{Atomic\:volume}

✦ The atomic volume is the volume one mole of an element occupies at room temperature. Atomic volume is typically given in cubic centimeters per mole: cc/mol. The atomic volume is a calculated value using the atomic weight and the density using the formula: atomic volume = atomic weight/density

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