1 / 47

Chemistry 16.2

Chemistry 16.2. Concentrations of Solutions. 16.2.

neka
Download Presentation

Chemistry 16.2

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. Chemistry 16.2

  2. Concentrations of Solutions 16.2 • Water must be tested continually to ensure that the concentrations of contaminants do not exceed established limits. These contaminants include metals, pesticides, bacteria, and even the by-products of water treatment. You will learn how solution concentrations are calculated.

  3. 16.2 Molarity • Molarity • How do you calculate the molarity of a solution?

  4. 16.2 Molarity • The concentration of a solution is a measure of the amount of solute that is dissolved in a given quantity of solvent. • A dilute solution is one that contains a small amount of solute. • A concentratedsolution contains a large amount of solute.

  5. 16.2 Molarity • Molarity (M) is the number of moles of solute dissolved in one liter of solution. • To calculate the molarity of a solution, divide the moles of solute by the volume of the solution.

  6. 16.2 Molarity • To make a 0.5-molar (0.5M) solution, first add 0.5 mol of solute to a 1-L volumetric flask half filled with distilled water.

  7. 16.2 Molarity • Swirl the flask carefully to dissolve the solute.

  8. 16.2 Molarity • Fill the flask with water exactly to the 1-L mark.

  9. 16.2

  10. 16.2

  11. 16.2

  12. 16.2

  13. for Sample Problem 16.2 Problem Solving 16.8 Solve Problem 8 with the help of an interactive guided tutorial.

  14. 16.3

  15. 16.3 Sample Problem 16.3

  16. 16.3 Sample Problem 16.3

  17. 16.3 Sample Problem 16.3

  18. for Sample Problem 16.3 ProblemSolving 16.11 Solve Problem 11 with the help of an interactive guided tutorial.

  19. 16.2 Making Dilutions • Making Dilutions • What effect does dilution have on the total moles of solute in a solution?

  20. 16.2 Making Dilutions • Diluting a solution reduces the number of moles of solute per unit volume, but the total number of moles of solute in solution does not change.

  21. 16.2 Making Dilutions • The total number of moles of solute remains unchanged upon dilution, so you can write this equation. • M1 and V1 are the molarity and volume of the initial solution, and M2 and V2 are the molarity and volume of the diluted solution.

  22. 16.2 Making Dilutions • Making a Dilute Solution

  23. 16.2 Making Dilutions • To prepare 100 ml of 0.40M MgSO4 from a stock solution of 2.0M MgSO4, a student first measures 20 mL of the stock solution with a 20-mL pipet.

  24. 16.2 Making Dilutions • She then transfers the 20 mL to a 100-mL volumetric flask.

  25. 16.2 Making Dilutions • Finally she carefully adds water to the mark to make 100 mL of solution.

  26. 16.2 Making Dilutions • Volume-Measuring Devices

  27. 16.4

  28. 16.4

  29. 16.4

  30. 16.4

  31. for Sample Problem 16.4 ` Problem Solving 16.12 Solve Problem 12 with the help of an interactive guided tutorial.

  32. 16.2 Percent Solutions • Percent Solutions • What are two ways to express the percent concentration of a solution?

  33. 16.2 Percent Solutions • The concentration of a solution in percent can be expressed in two ways: as the ratio of the volume of the solute to the volume of the solution or as the ratio of the mass of the solute to the mass of the solution.

  34. 16.2 Percent Solutions • Concentration in Percent (Volume/Volume)

  35. 16.2 Percent Solutions • Isopropyl alcohol (2-propanol) is sold as a 91% solution. This solution consist of 91 mL of isopropyl alcohol mixed with enough water to make 100 mL of solution.

  36. 16.5

  37. 16.5

  38. 16.5

  39. 16.5

  40. for Sample Problem 16.5 Practice Problems For Sample Problem 16.5 Problem-Solving 16.15 Solve Problem 15 with the help of an interactive guided tutorial.

  41. 16.2 Percent Solutions • Concentration in Percent (Mass/Mass)

  42. 16.2 Section Quiz. • 16.2.

  43. 16.2 Section Quiz. • 1. To make a 1.00M aqueous solution of NaCl, 58.4 g of NaCl are dissolved in • 1.00 liter of water. • enough water to make 1.00 liter of solution • 1.00 kg of water. • 100 mL of water.

  44. 16.2 Section Quiz. • 2. What mass of sodium iodide (NaI) is contained in 250 mL of a 0.500M solution? • 150 g • 75.0 g • 18.7 g • 0.50 g

  45. 16.2 Section Quiz. • 3. Diluting a solution does NOT change which of the following? • concentration • volume • milliliters of solvent • moles of solute

  46. 16.2 Section Quiz. • 4. In a 2000 g solution of glucose that is labeled 5.0% (m/m), the mass of water is • 2000 g. • 100 g. • 1995 g. • 1900 g.

  47. END OF SHOW

More Related