A drop of water contains one molecule per litre of water on Earth!?

The molecules in a single drop of water diluted evenly in the Earth’s oceans would result in the density of one molecule per litre of sea...
14 September 2008

Question

The molecules in a single drop of water diluted evenly in the Earth’s oceans would result in the density of one molecule per litre of sea water. In other words, if you made one little drop of water go into the sea somewhere, given enough time, there’s enough molecules in one drop to spread out across the whole of the Earth’s oceans so there was one molecule per litre.

Answer

This is their maths: There are about 24,000 droplets in one litre. That gives you a droplet volume of about 0.03cm cubed. The relative molecular mass of water is 18g per mole. A mole is the number of molecules, it's the mass in grams of the molecules in one mole. You need that to calculate the next bit of the equation. In one litre there must be 1000/18 moles. We know from Avogadro's constant there are 6.022 X 10 to the 23 molecules in a mole of something. That means that in a litre of water there must be 1000/18 X 6.022 X 10 to the power of 23 molecules in a litre. That means per droplet you have to divide that number by 24,000 because there are 24,000 droplets in a litre. That means there must be 1.39 X 10 to the 21 molecules of water in an individual droplet of water which is an amazing number of molecules. The volume of the Earth's oceans is 1.37 X 10 to the 9 cubic km. That's a reasonably well-understood figure. If you need to convert that into m cubed you have to times it by 1000 cubed because there's a thousand m in a km. That's 10 to the power of 9. To turn that into litres you've got to times it by 1000 cubed again. So that's 10 to the power of 12. That means that on Earth there are 1.37 X 10 to the 21 litres. That's nearly the same number as there are molecules in the droplet of water. If you put one into the other you have almost one molecule of water per litre of water on Earth.

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