1 / 30

I. The Nature of Solutions

Solutions. I. The Nature of Solutions. A. Definitions. Solution - homogeneous mixture. Solute - substance being dissolved. Solvent - present in greater amount. A. Definitions. Solvent - H 2 O. Solute - KMnO 4. B. Solvation. Solvation – the process of dissolving.

zubin
Download Presentation

I. The Nature of Solutions

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 I. The Nature of Solutions

  2. A. Definitions • Solution - homogeneous mixture Solute - substance being dissolved Solvent - present in greater amount

  3. A. Definitions Solvent - H2O Solute - KMnO4

  4. B. Solvation • Solvation – the process of dissolving solute particles are surrounded by solvent particles First... solute particles are separated and pulled into solution Then...

  5. - + - - + + acetic acid salt sugar B. Solvation Non- Electrolyte Weak Electrolyte Strong Electrolyte solute exists as ions and molecules solute exists as ions only solute exists as molecules only DISSOCIATION IONIZATION

  6. B. Solvation • Dissociation • separation of an ionic solid into aqueous ions NaCl(s)  Na+(aq) + Cl–(aq)

  7. B. Solvation • Ionization • breaking apart of some polar molecules into aqueous ions HNO3(aq) + H2O(l)  H3O+(aq) + NO3–(aq)

  8. B. Solvation • Molecular Solvation • molecules stay intact C6H12O6(s)  C6H12O6(aq)

  9. NONPOLAR NONPOLAR POLAR POLAR B. Solvation “Like Dissolves Like”

  10. B. Solvation • Soap/Detergent • polar “head” with long nonpolar “tail” • dissolves nonpolar grease in polar water

  11. UNSATURATED SOLUTION more solute dissolves SATURATED SOLUTION no more solute dissolves SUPERSATURATED SOLUTION becomes unstable, crystals form C. Solubility concentration

  12. C. Solubility • Solubility • maximum grams of solute that will dissolve in 100 g of solvent at a given temperature • varies with temp • based on a saturated soln

  13. C. Solubility • Solubility Curve • shows the dependence of solubility on temperature

  14. C. Solubility • Solids are more soluble at... • high temperatures. • Gases are more soluble at... • low temperatures & • high pressures (Henry’s Law). • EX: nitrogen narcosis, the “bends,” soda

  15. Solutions • Solutions WS

  16. Solutions II. Concentration

  17. A. Concentration • The amount of solute in a solution. • Describing Concentration • % by mass - medicated creams • % by volume - rubbing alcohol • ppm, ppb - water contaminants • molarity - used by chemists • molality - used by chemists

  18. A. Concentration Water Quality Report

  19. mass of solvent only 1 kg water = 1 L water B. Molality

  20. B. Molality • Find the molality of a solution containing 75 g of MgCl2 in 250 mL of water. 75 g MgCl2 1 mol MgCl2 95.21 g MgCl2 0.25 kg water = 3.2m MgCl2

  21. B. Molality • How many grams of NaCl are req’d to make a 1.54m solution using 0.500 kg of water? 0.500 kg water 1.54 mol NaCl 1 kg water 58.44 g NaCl 1 mol NaCl = 45.0 g NaCl

  22. C. Dilution • Preparation of a desired solution by adding water to a concentrate. • Moles of solute remain the same.

  23. C. Dilution • What volume of 15.8M HNO3 is required to make 250 mL of a 6.0M solution? GIVEN: M1 = 15.8M V1 = ? M2 = 6.0M V2 = 250 mL WORK: M1 V1 = M2 V2 (15.8M)V1 = (6.0M)(250mL) V1 = 95 mL of 15.8M HNO3

  24. 500 mL of 1.54M NaCl 500 mLwater 500 mL volumetric flask 500 mL mark 45.0 gNaCl D. Preparing Solutions • 1.54m NaCl in 0.500 kg of water • mass 45.0 g of NaCl • add water until total volume is 500 mL • mass 45.0 g of NaCl • add 0.500 kg of water

  25. 95 mL of15.8M HNO3 250 mL mark water for safety D. Preparing Solutions • 250 mL of 6.0M HNO3by dilution • measure 95 mL of 15.8M HNO3 • combine with water until total volume is 250 mL • Safety: “Do as you oughtta, add the acid to the watta!”

  26. Turn in one paper per team. Complete the following steps: A) Show the necessary calculations. B) Write out directions for preparing the solution. For each of the following solutions: 1) 100.0 mL of 0.50M NaCl 2) 0.25m NaCl in 100.0 mL of water 3) 100.0 mL of 3.0M HCl from 12.1M concentrate. Solution Preparation Activity

  27. 100.0 mL of 0.50 M NaCl .100 L(0.50 mol NaCl)(58g NaCl) = 2.9 g NaCl (1.0L)(1 mol NaCl) Dissolve 2.9 g of NaCl in water and fill to 100.0 mL Solution Preparation Activity –Solution 1

  28. 0.25 m NaCl in 100.0 mL of water 0.1000 L(0.25 mol)(58 g NaCl) = 1.5 g NaCl (1.0 L) (1 mol NaCl) Dissolve 1.5 g of NaCl in 100.0 mL of water Solution Preparation Activity –Solution 2

  29. 100.0 mL of 3.0M HCl from 12.1M conc M1V1 = M2V2 V1= M2V2 M1 V1 = (0.1000 L)(3.0 mol/L HCl) = 0.025 L of conc (12.1 mol/L HCl) Add 25 mL of concentrate and fill to 100.0 mL Solution Preparation Activity –Solution 3

  30. Practice Time • Do Solution Concentration WS

More Related