1 / 10

Solutions – Chapter 16

Solutions – Chapter 16 . Mr.Yeung. Lesson 4 - Objectives. Take up questions Must concentrate….in liquid form! And gas (Concentrations) Molarity. Molarity. (Molarity) = moles of solute / litres of solution Example: putting 2 marbles in a can of Coke. The concentration would be:

aisha
Download Presentation

Solutions – Chapter 16

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Solutions – Chapter 16 Mr.Yeung

  2. Lesson 4 - Objectives • Take up questions • Must concentrate….in liquid form! And gas (Concentrations) • Molarity

  3. Molarity • (Molarity) = moles of solute / litres of solutionExample: putting 2 marbles in a can of Coke. The concentration would be: • 2 marbles / a can of Coke • In mole terms… if you have 0.5moles and you want to find the molarity. It would be • 0.5moles / 1L = .25M • Molarity can sometimes be denoted as C for concentration or M for molarity • Units for molarity = moles/litre

  4. Questions • Example 1.  What is the molarity of a 5.00 liter solution that was made with 10.0 moles of  KBr ? •                     # of moles of soluteMolarity = ----------------------                     Liters of solution • Given:  # of moles of solute = 10.0 moles           Liters of solution = 5.00 liters •                    10.0 moles of KBrMolarity = --------------------------  = 2.00 M                     5.00 Liters of solution • Answer = 2.00 M

  5. Questions • Example 2.  A 250 ml solution is made with 0.50 moles of NaCl.  What is the Molarity of the solution? • We must change the ml to Liters as shown below: • 250 ml      1 liter             x     --------    = 0.25 liters                   1000 ml •                    # of moles of soluteMolarity = ----------------------                     Liters of solution • Given:  Number of moles of solute = 0.50 moles of NaCl            Liters of solution = 0.25 L of solution •                   0.50 moles of NaClMolarity = --------------------- = 2.0 M solution                   0.25 L • Answer = 2.0 M solution of NaCl

  6. Questions • Example 1.  What would be the volume of a 2.00 M (moles/L) solution made with 6.00 moles of LiF? • Solution: •                                 # of moles of soluteLiters of solution =   --------------------                                        Molarity • Given:  # of moles of solute = 6.00 moles           Molarity = 2.00 M (moles/L) • Liters of solution = 6.00 moles                               -----------                               2.00 moles/L • Answer = 3.00 L of solution

  7. Questions • Example 1.  How many moles of CaCl2 would be used in the making 0.500 L of a 5.0M solution? How many grams of CaCl2 were used? • Solution: • # of moles of solute = Molarity x Liters of solution. • Given: Molarity = 5.0 M (moles/L)           Volume = 0.500 L • # of moles of CaCl2 = 5.0 moles/L x 0.500 moles • Answer = 2.5 moles of CaCl2

  8. Example 2.  What is the volume of 3.0 M solution of NaCl made with 526g of solute? • Solution: • First find the molar mass of NaCl. • Na = 23.0 g x 1 ion per formula unit = 23.0 gCl = 35.5 g x 1 ion per formula unit  = 35.5 g                                                       ----------58.5 g • Now find out how many moles of NaCl you have: •                      mass of sample# of moles = -----------------                      Molar mass • Given:  mass of sample = 526 g                 Molar mass = 58.5 g •                                    526 g# of moles of NaCl = ------------                                   58.5 g • Answer:  # of moles of NaCl = 8.99 moles • Finally, go back to your molarity formula to solve the problem: •                               # of moles of soluteLiters of solution =   --------------------                                        Molarity • Given:  # of moles of solute = 8.99 moles           Molarity of the solution = 3.0 M (moles/L) •                                       8.99 moles# of Liters of solution = -------------                                     3.0 moles/L • Final Answer = 3.0 L

  9. Various representations of concentration • For liquids- • Grams per litre (g/L) • %w/v = (mass of solute/100ml of solution) * 100 • %v/v = (volume of solute (ml)/100ml of solution) * 100 • For solids • %w/w = (mass of solute/100g of solution) * 100

  10. Representations of concentrations • For gas • Ppm = parts per million • Ex: 100 ppm sodium ions in water = 10 sodium ions in 1 million particles of water • Ppb = parts per billion • Ex: 10 ppb iron in water = 10 particles of iron in 1 billion particles of water

More Related