The mass number gives an estimate of the
isotopic mass measured in
daltons (Da). For 12C, the isotopic mass is exactly 12, since the dalton is defined as 1/12 of the mass of 12C. For other isotopes, the isotopic mass is usually within of the mass number. For example, 35Cl (17 protons and 18 neutrons) has a mass number of 35 and an isotopic mass of . The difference of the actual isotopic mass minus the mass number of an atom is known as the
mass excess, which for 35Cl is –0.03115. Mass excess should not be confused with
mass defect, which is the difference between the mass of an atom and its constituent particles (namely
protons,
neutrons and
electrons). There are two reasons for mass excess, both stemming from the fact that the
dalton is based on coercing to 12 daltons: • A neutron's mass is , which is greater than a proton's, . The
dalton ignores this by assuming equal proportions of each (the reason both protons
and neutrons out-mass 1 Da is explained below), so it inherently loses accuracy as the balance between protons shifts in either direction, such as (0 neutrons) or (significantly more neutrons than protons). •
Nuclear binding energy varies between nuclei. A nucleus with greater binding energy has a lower total energy, and therefore a lower mass according to Einstein's
mass–energy equivalence relation . The
dalton assumes 's binding energy of , so with more energy, such as 's , actual mass drops, and with less energy, such as 's 0, it goes up. == Relative atomic mass of an element ==