Atomic mass is essentially the weighted average mass of an element's isotopes, considering their relative abundance. This value is what you often see on periodic tables, and it reflects an average rather than the precise weight of any single atom. In the context of chlorine, this average comes out to be 35.4527 u.
Why is it a weighted average? Simply because elements often exist in nature as a mix of isotopes, which are atoms with the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons. For chlorine, the common isotopes are chlorine-35 and chlorine-37.
- Chlorine-35 has an approximate mass of 34.96885 u.
- Chlorine-37 is heavier, with a mass of about 36.96590 u.
Because chlorine-35 is far more common, making up about 75% of chlorine in nature, it pulls the average atomic mass closer to its value. This means the average mass you see, known as atomic mass or atomic weight, isn't exactly the same as any individual atom's mass.