Skip to content

Reference table

Atoms to Moles Table: Moles by Number of particles

Reference table of moles for Atoms to Moles across a range of number of particles values — exact, engine-computed figures you can read off at a glance.

By Vikram Iyer, M.Sc Mathematics · Updated Jun 2026 · 1 min read

This atoms to moles reference table shows the moles for a range of number of particles values. Every figure is computed with the same engine that powers our Atoms to Moles Calculator, so the numbers are exact.

Number of particlesMoles
150,000,000,000,000,004,194,3040.0000
300,000,000,000,000,008,388,6080.0000
449,999,999,999,999,979,028,4800.0000
600,000,000,000,000,016,777,2160.0000
899,999,999,999,999,958,056,9600.0000
1,200,000,000,000,000,033,554,4320.0000
1,800,000,000,000,000,184,549,3760.0000
3,000,000,000,000,000,486,539,2640.0000
4,200,000,000,000,000,251,658,2400.0000
6,000,000,000,000,000,973,078,5280.0000

How to use this table

Find the row closest to your number of particles and read across to the moles. For a value between two rows, the real figure sits between them — or enter your exact numbers in the Atoms to Moles Calculator for a precise answer.

Need a value that is not in the table? — the Atoms to Moles Calculator does it instantly, for free, with the formula and a worked example built in.

Continue exploring science calculators with these tools: Impulse Calculator, Elastic Potential Energy Calculator, Thermal Expansion Calculator, Buoyancy Force Calculator, RPM to Linear Speed Calculator.

Calculators in this guide

Frequently asked questions

Each cell is computed with the standard formula using exact arithmetic — the same calculation behind our Atoms to Moles Calculator — so every figure is accurate for the stated assumptions.

Yes. The table covers common number of particles values; for any exact figure, enter your own numbers in the Atoms to Moles Calculator.

Vikram Iyer · M.Sc Mathematics

Vikram Iyer is a mathematics educator with over fifteen years of teaching experience, specialising in making quantitative concepts clear and practical for everyday use.