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Concentration

Concentration. EQ. What is concentration?. Describe ways that concentration can be expressed and calculated. You made 2 saturated solutions, NaCl and MgSO 4. Which saturated solution had more solute dissolved in it? MgSO 4 How much MgSO 4 was needed to saturate 30 mL of water?

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Concentration

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  1. Concentration

  2. EQ. What is concentration? • Describe ways that concentration can be expressed and calculated

  3. You made 2 saturated solutions, NaCl and MgSO4. • Which saturated solution had more solute dissolved in it? • MgSO4 • How much MgSO4 was needed to saturate 30 mL of water? • On average 28-30 grams or 4 times the amount of NaCl

  4. Stock Solutions • I have 2 MgSO4 solutions. They are not saturated. • Solution 1 is made with 200 mL of H2O and 20g of MgSO4 • Solution 2 is made with the same amount of H2O 200 mL, and 50g of MgSO4

  5. How are these two solutions different? • Both are made with the same substances and the same amount of solvent, 200 mL of H2O. • They differ in the amount of solute, MgSO4, dissolved in the H2O.

  6. Concentration • When two solutions are made with the same amount of solvent (H2O), but different amount of solute (MgSO4), the solutions differ in concentrations. • The solution with more solute is more concentrated.

  7. Concentration • :a ratio between the amount of solute and the amount of solvent in a solution. • The more solute there is dissolved in a volume of solvent, the more concentrated the solution. • Is solution 1 or solution 2 more concentrated? • Solution 2

  8. Solution 2 is more concentrated • Solution 2 is made with 50g of magnesium sulfate in 200 mL of water • Solution 1 is made with 20g of magnesium sulfate in 200 mL of water. • 50g > 20g • Solution 2 has more solute dissolved in the same amount of solvent than solution 1

  9. Find the mass of the samples • If I find the mass of 40 mL samples of these two solutions, what do you think I will discover? • Will the masses of the two equal volumes be equal or will the mass of one 40 mL sample be greater than the other?

  10. Volunteers to help • 2 students • Find mass of 40 mL samples. • Solution 1 20g/200 mL is about 40.5g • Solution 2 50g/200 mL is about 42.5g

  11. We find that…. • The more concentrated solution has the greater mass than the less concentrated solution

  12. What is the relationship between concentration of solutions and their masses? • When you find the mass of equal volumes of solutions made with the same substances, the sample with the greatest mass is most concentrated. • Conversely, the sample with the lowest mass is the least concentrated. • There is a direct relationship between mass and concentration.

  13. Remember… • Mass can be used to determine which of several solutions is most concentrated onlywhen equal volumes of solutions made with the same substances are compared.

  14. MgSO4 Solutions • Today each group will make their own solution with MgSO4 and H2O. • After the solutions are made, we will investigate them to see if we can figure out which solution is most concentrated. • Watch as I do the first one that is 5g MgSO4 and 25g H2O • Your recipe is…..(circle it/star it)

  15. RecipesTable MgSO4 H2O • Table 1 5g 25g • Table 2 8g 20g • Table 3 12g 20g • Table 4 8g 40g • Table 5 10g 25g • Table 6 15g 25g • Table 7 10g 50g • Table 8 16g 40g

  16. Materials • Each tray • MgSO4 station • Mass stations (2) • Water from sink • *safety rules

  17. Make Solutions • Measure the water accurately. Use pipette to get the volume exact. • Measure the mass of MgSO4 accurately. Zero the balance with the cup on the pan. • Wear protective eyewear. Mix and stir carefully. Avoid spills. • NO SQUIRTING! NO SPLASHING!

  18. Compare Magnesium Sulfate Solutions • Which of the solutions we made is most concentrated? • How can we find out? • Make a plan.

  19. Plan • Do you agree… on a volume of solution that every group will measure and find the mass. • *The volume should not exceed 20 mL • Measure and record the mass of the 20 mL samples • Compare the masses of the 20 mL samples

  20. Record the results • On member from each table report results. • Add to chart on overhead transparency 27

  21. Discuss • Transcribe into MgSO4 solutions sheet • Answer question 1 • General rule: • Mass per volume • Which are most concentrated? • Recipes from table 2 (12 g of MgSO4 and 20 g of H2O) and from table 5 (15 g MgSO4 and 25 g of H2O)

  22. Calculate Mass Per Unit Volume • The concentration of solutions is most easily compared when the concentration is expressed as mass per unit volume, that is, the mass (number of grams) of 1mL. • Calculate the concentration of the solutions in grams per milliliter: g/mL = mass of 20mL (g) 20 mL

  23. Summary 1 • A Solution is: a mixture of two or more substances. • In a solution one substance, the solute, is dissolved in the other substance, the solvent. • When a solute dissolves, it is broken into particles by solvent particles. • The solute particles are carried into the solvent by solvent particles. • Solute particles are distributed uniformly throughout the particles of the solvent.

  24. Summary 2 • There is a limit to the amount of solute that can dissolve in a given amount of solvent. • When the solvent has no more room for solute particles, the solution is saturated. • Additional solute will remain undissolved on the bottom of the container.

  25. Summary 3 • The amount of solute dissolved in a volume of solvent determines the concentration of the solution. • Concentration is: a ration of solute to solvent in a solution. • The substances in a solution are not changed chemically when they dissolve. • Often evaporation will separate the solvent and the solute.

  26. Reading • Concentration- Resource book articles • Complete Lab Manual page 85

  27. Mid-Summative Exam 8 • Friday

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