Average Atomic Mass Calculator -- Isotope Abundances | LazyTools
Chemistry

Average Atomic Mass Calculator

Calculate the weighted average atomic mass of any element from its isotope masses and natural abundances. Enter up to four isotopes -- abundances must sum to 100% -- and see the result in atomic mass units (u).

Up to 4 isotopes Abundance must total 100% C, Cl, Cu, Mg presets Formula shown Free, no signup
Average Atomic Mass Calculator
Weighted average from isotope masses and natural abundances
Enter up to 4 isotopes
Examples:

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Key features

Why use the LazyTools Average Atomic Mass Calculator?

Weighted average from isotopes

Computes the exact weighted average from up to four isotopes matching the periodic table value for natural elements.

Abundance sum validation

Warns if isotope abundances do not total 100% -- a common exam calculation error.

Isotope contribution shown

Each isotope contribution (mass x fractional abundance) is displayed in the result.

4 element presets

Pre-loaded data for carbon, chlorine, copper and magnesium.

Copy result

One click copies the average atomic mass.

Free, no signup

Runs in your browser.

How to use

How to use this tool in three steps

Enter isotope masses

Type the precise mass in u for each naturally occurring isotope.

Enter natural abundances

Enter the % abundance for each isotope. All must total 100%.

Click Calculate

The weighted average atomic mass appears immediately.

Compare to periodic table

For natural elements, the result matches the atomic mass on the periodic table.

Comparison

LazyTools vs other Average Atomic Mass Calculator tools

FeatureLazyToolsOmni CalculatorChemistryStepsAK Lectures
Abundance validationYES✗ No✗ No✗ No
Up to 4 isotopesYES✓ Yes✓ Yes✓ Yes
Element presetsYES✗ No✗ No✗ No
Formula shownYES✓ Yes✗ No✗ No
Free, no signupYES✓ Yes✓ Yes✓ Yes
Reference

Common element isotopes and natural abundances

ElementIsotopeMass (u)Abundance (%)
HydrogenH-11.0078399.985
HydrogenH-2 (Deuterium)2.014100.015
CarbonC-1212.0000098.93
CarbonC-1313.003351.07
ChlorineCl-3534.9688575.76
ChlorineCl-3736.9659024.24
CopperCu-6362.9296069.15
CopperCu-6564.9277930.85
MagnesiumMg-2423.9850478.99
MagnesiumMg-2524.9858410.00
MagnesiumMg-2625.9825911.01
SiliconSi-2827.9769392.23
Guide

Average Atomic Mass Calculator: Complete Guide

The average atomic mass on the periodic table is the weighted average of all naturally occurring isotopes, weighted by their natural abundance. Formula: Average atomic mass = sum of (isotope mass x fractional abundance). The LazyTools calculator accepts up to four isotopes and computes this weighted average, showing the result in atomic mass units (u).

How to calculate average atomic mass: worked examples

For chlorine: Cl-35 (34.969 u, 75.76%) and Cl-37 (36.966 u, 24.24%). Convert abundances to fractions: 0.7576 and 0.2424. Average = (34.969 x 0.7576) + (36.966 x 0.2424) = 26.496 + 8.960 = 35.453 u. Periodic table value: 35.45 u. For copper: Cu-63 (62.930 u, 69.15%) and Cu-65 (64.928 u, 30.85%). Average = (62.930 x 0.6915) + (64.928 x 0.3085) = 43.515 + 20.030 = 63.545 u (periodic table: 63.546 u).

Why carbon atomic mass is 12.011, not exactly 12

Carbon-12 has mass exactly 12.000 u by definition, and carbon-13 has mass 13.003 u. Carbon-12 is 98.93% abundant; carbon-13 is 1.07% abundant. Average = (12.000 x 0.9893) + (13.003 x 0.0107) = 11.872 + 0.139 = 12.011 u. This 0.011 deviation from 12 is significant in precise molecular weight calculations for mass spectrometry and isotope-labelling experiments. Any calculation requiring four or more significant figures must use 12.011, not 12.

The abundance sum constraint

All isotope abundances of a given element must sum to exactly 100% because they represent the complete natural distribution. If abundances do not total 100%, the weighted average is physically meaningless. The LazyTools calculator checks this and warns when the total deviates by more than 0.1%. Common errors: using atom fraction (0-1 scale) instead of percentage (0-100 scale), or omitting a minor isotope. Trace isotopes contributing less than 0.01% can be omitted from coursework calculations without significant error.

Magnesium: three-isotope example

Magnesium has three stable isotopes: Mg-24 (23.985 u, 78.99%), Mg-25 (24.986 u, 10.00%), Mg-26 (25.983 u, 11.01%). Average = (23.985 x 0.7899) + (24.986 x 0.1000) + (25.983 x 0.1101) = 18.945 + 2.499 + 2.861 = 24.305 u. Periodic table value: 24.305 u. Three-isotope calculations are common in university chemistry entrance examinations and standardised tests. The LazyTools calculator handles all four isotopes simultaneously.

Identifying an unknown element from isotope data

A standard exam question type: an unknown element has two isotopes -- isotope X (mass 10.013 u, 19.9% abundant) and isotope Y (mass 11.009 u, 80.1% abundant). Average = (10.013 x 0.199) + (11.009 x 0.801) = 1.993 + 8.818 = 10.811 u. The periodic table entry matching 10.811 is boron (B, Z=5). A second example: two isotopes at masses 6.015 (7.59%) and 7.016 (92.41%). Average = (6.015 x 0.0759) + (7.016 x 0.9241) = 0.456 + 6.484 = 6.941 u -- this is lithium (Li, Z=3). Entering the given data into the LazyTools calculator and comparing the result to the periodic table identifies the element.

Browser-based chemistry tools: private and always available

All LazyTools chemistry calculators run entirely in your browser. No data is sent to a server, no account is required and no installation is needed. The tool works on any device and results appear instantly. The copy button transfers answers to your clipboard for lab reports, problem sets or notes.

Common calculation mistakes to avoid

The most frequent errors in chemistry calculations involve unit mismatches, rounding intermediate values too early and applying the wrong formula. Always verify units are consistent before calculating. Carry four significant figures through intermediate steps and round only the final answer. Identify known and unknown quantities first, then select the formula connecting them -- the systematic approach used in all worked examples throughout this guide.

Silicon: a three-isotope industrial example

Silicon underpins the global semiconductor industry and its average atomic mass matters for precise stoichiometry in chemical vapour deposition and doping processes. Silicon has three naturally occurring isotopes: Si-28 (27.977 u, 92.23% abundant), Si-29 (28.977 u, 4.67% abundant) and Si-30 (29.974 u, 3.10% abundant). Checking that abundances sum to 100%: 92.23 + 4.67 + 3.10 = 100.00% -- confirmed. Weighted average = (27.977 x 0.9223) + (28.977 x 0.0467) + (29.974 x 0.0310) = 25.794 + 1.354 + 0.929 = 28.077 u. The periodic table lists silicon as 28.085 u. The small discrepancy arises because the precise masses given here are rounded; using more decimal places for each isotope mass and abundance gives 28.0855 u exactly. This three-isotope calculation is a standard advanced-level worked example.

How mass spectrometry measures isotope abundances

Mass spectrometers measure isotope abundances directly by ionising atoms, separating ions by mass-to-charge ratio, and counting the number reaching the detector at each mass value. The output is a mass spectrum showing peaks at each isotope mass. The relative height of each peak gives the relative abundance. For a natural chlorine sample, a mass spectrum shows two major peaks: a tall peak at mass 35 (Cl-35) and a shorter peak at mass 37 (Cl-37), in roughly a 3:1 ratio matching the 75.76:24.24 natural abundance. From these peak heights, the average atomic mass can be calculated using the same formula as this calculator. Mass spectrometry is also used to detect isotopic enrichment or depletion in geological, archaeological and environmental samples, where deviations from natural abundance carry scientific information.

Isotope notation and nuclide charts

Isotopes are written with the mass number as a superscript and the atomic number as a subscript before the element symbol: for example, carbon-14 is written as 14 over 6, C (or just C-14 in text). All isotopes of a given element have the same atomic number Z but different mass numbers A. The nuclide chart (Segre chart) plots all known nuclides with neutron number on the horizontal axis and proton number on the vertical axis. Stable nuclides form a narrow "valley of stability" along the centre. Nuclides outside this valley are radioactive and decay toward stability. The stable isotopes used in average atomic mass calculations all lie within this valley. Understanding isotope notation is prerequisite knowledge for average atomic mass problems in all major chemistry qualifications.

Isotopic composition and the environment

Natural isotope abundances are not perfectly constant everywhere on Earth. Light isotopes (lower mass) are preferentially incorporated into chemical and biological processes -- a phenomenon called isotope fractionation. Water evaporating from the ocean is depleted in heavy oxygen (O-18) relative to the ocean. Plants preferentially fix carbon-12 over carbon-13 during photosynthesis. This fractionation means that the "natural abundance" values in textbooks are average values for the whole Earth; actual samples can deviate slightly. For forensic applications, this deviation is deliberate: measuring the isotope ratio of elements like strontium and oxygen in human tooth enamel reveals where a person grew up, because local geology imprints its isotope signature on drinking water and food. For coursework calculations, the standard tabulated abundances (as used by this calculator) are always appropriate. For students preparing for A-level, IB, AP or university entrance examinations, practising average atomic mass calculations with a range of elements -- particularly those with three isotopes like magnesium and silicon -- builds the pattern recognition needed to handle any combination of isotope data presented in an unseen examination question. The LazyTools average atomic mass calculator allows rapid checking of manual calculations: work through the problem by hand first, then enter the values to verify. Discrepancies between manual and calculator results almost always point to a specific error -- most commonly a division-by-100 conversion omitted when converting percentage abundance to fractional abundance, or a digit transposition in one of the isotope masses. Identifying and correcting these errors before an examination is exactly the purpose for which this tool is designed.

Frequently asked questions

Average atomic mass = sum of (isotope mass x fractional abundance). Convert percentages to fractions (divide by 100). Abundances must sum to 1.000.

Natural carbon is 98.93% carbon-12 and 1.07% carbon-13. The weighted average = (12.000 x 0.9893) + (13.003 x 0.0107) = 12.011 u.

Cl-35 (34.969 u, 75.76%) and Cl-37 (36.966 u, 24.24%). Average = (34.969 x 0.7576) + (36.966 x 0.2424) = 35.453 u.

The result is physically meaningless. Check for missing isotopes or data entry errors. Natural isotopes of any element must sum to exactly 100%.

Mass number is an integer for a specific isotope. Average atomic mass is the decimal weighted average over all natural isotopes shown on the periodic table.

Calculate the average atomic mass from the given isotope masses and abundances, then look up that value in the periodic table.

The tool uses percentages (0-100 scale). If your data is in atom fractions (0-1 scale), multiply each value by 100 before entering.

Yes. Completely free, no account required.