molar electric charge - Maple Help

Units of Molar Electric Charge

Description

 • Molar electric charge has the dimension electric current time per mole. The SI composite unit of molar electric charge is the coulomb per mole.
 • Maple knows the units of molar electric charge listed in the following table.

 Name Symbols Context Alternate Spellings Prefixes faraday chemical * faradays SI physical SI carbon12 SI

 An asterisk ( * ) indicates the default context, an at sign (@) indicates an abbreviation, and under the prefixes column, SI indicates that the unit takes all SI prefixes, IEC indicates that the unit takes IEC prefixes, and SI+ and SI- indicate that the unit takes only positive and negative SI prefixes, respectively.  Refer to a unit in the Units package by indexing the name or symbol with the context, for example, faraday[chemical]; or, if the context is indicated as the default, by using only the unit name or symbol, for example, faraday.
 The units of molar electric charge are defined as follows.
 A chemical faraday is approximately $96495.7$ coulombs per mole.
 A physical faraday is approximately $96521.9$ coulombs per mole.
 A carbon-12 faraday is approximately $96485.31$ coulombs per mole.

Examples

 > $\mathrm{convert}\left('\mathrm{faraday}','\mathrm{dimensions}','\mathrm{base}'=\mathrm{true}\right)$
 $\frac{{\mathrm{electric_current}}{}{\mathrm{time}}}{{\mathrm{amount_of_substance}}}$ (1)
 > $\mathrm{convert}\left(1.60217733×{10}^{-19},'\mathrm{units}','\mathrm{faraday}',\frac{'C'}{'\mathrm{mol}'}\right)$
 ${1.546032230}{×}{{10}}^{{-14}}$ (2)
 > $\mathrm{convert}\left(1.60217733×{10}^{-19},'\mathrm{units}','\mathrm{faraday}\left[\mathrm{physical}\right]','\mathrm{faraday}\left[\mathrm{chemical}\right]'\right)$
 ${1.602612345}{×}{{10}}^{{-19}}$ (3)
 > $\mathrm{convert}\left(1.60217733×{10}^{-19},'\mathrm{units}','\mathrm{faraday}\left[\mathrm{carbon12}\right]','\mathrm{faraday}\left[\mathrm{chemical}\right]'\right)$
 ${1.602005199}{×}{{10}}^{{-19}}$ (4)
 > $\mathrm{convert}\left(1,'\mathrm{units}','\mathrm{faraday}\left[\mathrm{carbon12}\right]','\mathrm{electron}','\mathrm{energy}'\right)$
 ${1}$ (5)