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Explore the forces attracting molecules and what happens when solids dissolve. Learn about concentrations, solubility, and the effects of temperature on solubility. Understand the concepts through practice pages and essential questions.
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Molecular Mixing Chapter 7
Non-bonding versus Bonding Forces • Which of the following attractive forces would be the greatest: • Ionic • Covalent • Hydrogen bonding
Essential Questions • What are the forces that attract molecules to one another? • What happens when a solid dissolves into a liquid? • What determines how much of a solid will dissolve?
Essential Questions • How does temperature affect how much solid dissolves? • What about when gases dissolve in liquids? • How does soap work? • What does “hard water” mean? • How does a water softener work?
What are the forces that attract molecules to one another? • In pure liquids the forces are: • Dipole-dipole (in polar liquids) • Induced dipole-induced dipole (in nonpolar liquids).
Think, Pair, Share • An example of an electrostatic attraction would be • Iron fillings to a magnet • Piece of paper to the floor • Dust clinging to a mirror
Polar liquids • dipole – dipole attractions are the electrostatic attractions between the positive side of one molecule and the negative side of another molecule.
Nonpolar Liquids • Induced dipole-induced dipole attractions are the weak attractions created by temporary dipoles in nonpolar molecules causing (inducing) a weak temporary dipole in a nearby molecule.
Practice Pages • Induced dipole-induced dipole attraction
Think, Pair, Share • Which of the two following molecules has a greater attraction to itself? Why? • There are more hydrogen atoms. • It is a bigger molecule with more electrons. • There are more individual induced-dipole, induced-dipole attractions.
Practice Pages • Attraction in mixtures
Attractions in Mixtures • ion – dipole
Attractions in Mixtures • dipole - induced dipole • These forces come about when the presence of a polar molecule induces (causes) a dipole to form in a nearby nonpolar molecule.
Solutions – Key Ideas Single-phase homogeneous mixture can be gas, liquid, or solid solvent and solute Concentration unsaturated vs saturated solubility
Solutions are Mixtures • A physical blend of two or more substances. • Composition of mixtures can vary.
Solutions are Homogeneous Mixtures • Homogeneous Mixtures (Solutions) • Uniform throughout the sample • Examples • Kool-Aid • Gasoline
Liquid, Gas, or Solid • Air is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and a few other gases. • Alloys, like 14K gold, steel, or dental fillings, are mixtures of metals. • Gasoline and rubbing alcohol are mixtures of liquids. • All of these are solutions.
Why do Solids Dissolve • Solids dissolve when the attractive forces between the solvent and solute molecules exceed the attractive forces between the solute molecules.
Important Concept • It is important to realize that when a solid like sugar is added to water: • It may appear as if it has disappeared
Think, Pair, Share • Adding sugar to a 500 mL container of water will cause: • The volume to stay the same • The volume to decrease • The volume to increase
Concentration • Concentration is • It is how much _______ there is in a specified ______of solution.
Concentration Units • Concentrations are often • for example: • remember, the volume is the volume of _______, not the volume of _______.
Concentration Units • concentrations can be expressed as the number of molecules of solute per volume of solution. • For this, we use a unit called the mole. • A mole is 6.02 x 1023 things. (Just like a dozen is 12 things.)
Molar Concentrations • Chemists often express concentrations in • M • If I dissolve 6.02 x 1023 molecules of sucrose into one liter of solution
Molar Concentrations • 1.00 moles of sucrose weighs 342 grams, so if I dissolved 342 grams into enough water to make 1.00 liters of solution it would be 1.00 M.
Molar Concentrations • If I dissolved 684 grams of sucrose into 1.00 liters of solution it would be 2.00 M. • M1 = M2 ; g1 = g2 L1 L2 • What is the molarity if I dissolve 34.2 grams of sucrose into 1.00 liters of solution?
Solubility • Solubility is:
Saturated / Unsaturated • Saturated – • Unsaturated –
Concentration Calculations • If I dissolve 85 grams of baking soda in water to make 1.0 liter of solution, what is my concentration? • If I dissolved 200 g of baking soda in water to make 2.0 liters of solution, what is my concentration?
If I have 75 grams of sucrose and want to make a solution with a concentration of 125 g/liter, how much solution can I prepare? • If I want to make 500 mL of sucrose solution with a concentration of 250 g/L, how much sucrose do I need?
1.0 moles of NaOH weighs 40.0 grams. • What weight of NaOH do I need to make 200 mL of solution with a concentration of 2.0 M?
Effect of Temperature on Solubility • For most solids and liquids, solubility _________as temperature _______.
Soda Stream • How does it work? • What allows the gas to dissolve in the liquid?
Effect of Temperature on Solubility • For gases dissolved in liquids, solubility __________as temperature increases. • For gases dissolved in liquids, solubility __________as pressure increases.