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CHEMICAL CONCEPTS

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Title: CHEMICAL CONCEPTS


1
CHEMICAL CONCEPTS
  • CE 370 Lecture 3

2
Inorganic Chemistry
  • Definitions
  • Concentration Units
  • Chemical Equilibria
  • pH and Alkalinity

3
DEFINITIONS
  • Atomic Weight is the weight of an element when
    compared to Carbon (Carbon atomic weight is 12)
  • Valence is the combining power of the element
    when compared to Hydrogen (Hydrogen has a
    combining power of 1)
  • Equivalent Weight Atomic Weight / Valence

4
DEFINITIONS
  • Molecular weight is the sum of the atomic
    weights of the combined elements
  • Equivalent weight of a compound is that weight
    of the compound which contains 1 gram atom of
    available hydrogen or its chemical equivalent.

5
Concentration Units
  • milligram per liter (mg / l)
  • part per million (ppm)
  • kilograms per million liters
  • milliequivalents per liter (mg/l) / eq weight

6
Hydrogen Ion Concentration
  • When pure water dissociates
  • H2O ? H OH-
  • concentration of H ion is 10-7 mole per liter
  • concentration of OH- ion is 10-7 mole per liter
  • Since H concentration OH- concentration , the
    water is neutral

7
Acidic or Basic?
  • pH log ( 1 / H )
  • When H concentration is 10-7, then pH 7,
    which represents the neutral state.
  • If pH gt 7, then it is basic
  • If pH lt 7, then it is basic
  • Water ionization is represented by
  • HOH- Kw 10-14

8
Chemical Equilibria
  • aA bB ? cC dD
  • A and B are the reactants
  • C and D are the products
  • CcDd / AaBb K
  • molar concentration and Kequilibrium
    constant
  • In Water Chemistry,
  • H2CO3 ? H HCO3-
  • HHCO3- / H2CO3 K1 4.45?10-7 _at_ 25 ?C
  • HCO3- ? H CO3-2
  • HCO3-2 / HCO3 K2 4.69?10-11 _at_ 25 ?C
  • are very important equilibrium relationships

















9
  • CaCO3 ? Ca2 CO3- (at pH 10)
  • Ca2CO3- / CaCO3 K
  • Since CaCO3 is solid, it can be treated as
    constant, Ks , then
  • Ca2CO3- KKs Ksp 5 ? 10-9 _at_ 25? C
  • Ksp solubility constant
  • If Ca2CO3- lt Ksp , the solution is
    undersaturated
  • If Ca2CO3- gt Ksp , the solution is
    supersaturated

10
Shift of Equilibria
  • How to shift equilibria
  • Produce insoluble products
  • Produce gaseous products
  • Produce weakly ionized products
  • Produce oxidation-production reaction
  • Examples of Equilibria Shift
  • Ca2 2HCO3- Ca(OH)2 ? 2CaCO3 ? 2CO2
  • 3Cl2 2NH3 ? N2 ? 6H 6Cl-
  • 2H SO4-2 2Na 2OH- ? 2H2O 2Na SO4-2
  • 5Cl2 2CN- 8OH- ? 10Cl- 2CO2 N2 ? 4H2O

11
pH and Alkalinity
  • pH log (1 / H)
  • What is alkalinity?
  • Is the capacity of the water to neutralize acids
    without significant change in the pH value
  • How is alkalinity determined?
  • Titrating the water with standardized sulfuric
    acid solution (known normality, usually 0.02N)
  • What causes alkalinity?
  • Bicarbonate (HCO3-)
  • Carbonate (CO3-2)
  • Hydroxyl ions (OH-)

12
Physical Chemistry
  • Chemical Kinetics
  • Gas Laws
  • Colloidal Dispersions

13
Chemical Kinetics
  • Zero-order Reactions
  • First-order Reactions
  • Second-order Reactions

14
Zero-Order Reactions
  • The rate is independent of the concentration of
    the reactant or product
  • The change in concentration of the reactants with
    time is linear (-dC/dt k -r)
  • Rearrange and integrate between C0 to C and t0 to
    t
  • C-C0 -kt OR C C0 - kt
  • The equation represents a linear relationship
    between C and t (y b mx)

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16
First-Order Reactions
  • The rate is proportional to the concentration of
    the reactant
  • Change of the reactant with time can be
    represented by
  • (-dC/dt) kC -r
  • Rearrange and integrate to get
  • ln C ln C0 kt (this is a linear equation)
  • OR can be written in the form (C/C0) e-kt

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18
Second-Order Reactions
  • The rate is proportional to the second power of a
    single reactant
  • Change of the reactant with time can be
    represented by
  • (-dC/dt) kC2 -r
  • Rearrange and integrate to get
  • 1/C 1/ C0 kt (this is a linear equation)

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20
Effect of Temperature onReaction Rate
  • Increase in temperature can increase the reaction
    rate (mostly)
  • Arrhenius derived the following relationship that
    relates temperature to reaction-rate constant
  • k2 k1 ?(t2-t1) (? is the temperature
    coefficient)
  • A common value of ? is 1.072

21
Gas Laws
  • General Gas Law
  • Daltons law
  • Henrys Law

22
General Gas Law
  • Is the relationship between pressure, volume, and
    temperature of a gas at two different conditions.
    The law states that
  • (P1V1/T1) (P2V2/T2)
  • P is the pressure, V is the volume, and T is the
    absolute temperature in Calvin.

23
Daltons law
  • In a mixture of gases, each gas exerts a pressure
    independent of others and the partial pressure of
    each gas is proportional to the percent by volume
    of that gas in the mixture.
  • The partial pressure of each gas is equal to the
    pressure the gas would exert if it were the sole
    occupant of the volume available to the mixture.

24
Henrys Law
  • The weight of any gas that would dissolve in a
    given volume of a liquid, at a constant
    temperature, is directly proportional to the
    pressure the gas exerts above the liquid. So
  • Cs H pg
  • Cs is the concentration of the gas dissolved in
    the liquid at equilibrium
  • H is Henrys law constant for the gas at the
    given temperature
  • pg is the partial pressure of the gas above the
    liquid

25
Applications in Environmental Engineering
  • Aeration
  • The rate of solution of oxygen is proportional to
    the difference between equilibrium concentration
    as given by Henrys Law and the actual
    concentration in the liquid
  • (dC/dt) ? (Cs Ca)
  • Stripping
  • since Ca is greater than Cs
  • (dC/dt) ? (Ca Cs)

26
Colloidal Dispersions
  • Definition
  • A system in which particles of colloidal size of
    any nature (e.g. solid, liquid or gas) are
    dispersed in a continuous phase of a different
    composition (or state). The name dispersed phase
    for the particles should be used only if they
    have essentially the properties of a bulk phase
    of the same composition.

27
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29
Size and Examples of Colloids
  • Substance consisting of particles that, although
    too tiny to be seen with the unaided eye
    (typically 1 nanometer to 10 micrometers), are
    substantially larger than atoms and ordinary
    molecules and that are dispersed in a continuous
    phase. Both the dispersed phase and the
    continuous phase may be solid, liquid, or gas
    examples include suspensions, aerosols, smokes,
    emulsions, gels, sols, pastes, and foams.
    Colloids are often classified as reversible or
    irreversible, depending on whether their
    components can be separated. Dyes, detergents,
    polymers, proteins, and many other important
    substances exhibit colloidal behavior.

30
Classification of Colloids
  • One way of classifying colloids is to group them
    according to the phase (solid, liquid, or gas) of
    the dispersed substance and of the medium of
    dispersion. A gas may be dispersed in a liquid to
    form a foam (e.g., shaving lather or beaten egg
    white) or in a solid to form a solid foam (e.g.,
    styrofoam or marshmallow). A liquid may be
    dispersed in a gas to form an aerosol (e.g., fog
    or aerosol spray), in another liquid to form an
    emulsion (e.g., homogenized milk or mayonnaise),
    or in a solid to form a gel (e.g., jellies or
    cheese). A solid may be dispersed in a gas to
    form a solid aerosol (e.g., dust or smoke in
    air), in a liquid to form a sol (e.g., ink or
    muddy water), or in a solid to form a solid sol
    (e.g., certain alloys).

31
Formation of Colloids
  • There are two basic methods of forming a colloid
    reduction of larger particles to colloidal size,
    and condensation of smaller particles (e.g.,
    molecules) into colloidal particles. Some
    substances (e.g., gelatin or glue) are easily
    dispersed (in the proper solvent) to form a
    colloid this spontaneous dispersion is called
    peptization. A metal can be dispersed by
    evaporating it in an electric arc if the
    electrodes are immersed in water, colloidal
    particles of the metal form as the metal vapor
    cools. A solid (e.g., paint pigment) can be
    reduced to colloidal particles in a colloid mill,
    a mechanical device that uses a shearing force to
    break apart the larger particles. An emulsion is
    often prepared by homogenization, usually with
    the addition of an emulsifying agent. The above
    methods involve breaking down a larger substance
    into colloidal particles. Condensation of smaller
    particles to form a colloid usually involves
    chemical reactionstypically displacement,
    hydrolysis, or oxidation and reduction.

32
Properties of Colloids
  • One property of colloid systems that
    distinguishes them from true solutions is that
    colloidal particles scatter light. If a beam of
    light, such as that from a flashlight, passes
    through a colloid, the light is reflected
    (scattered) by the colloidal particles and the
    path of the light can therefore be observed. When
    a beam of light passes through a true solution
    (e.g., salt in water) there is so little
    scattering of the light that the path of the
    light cannot be seen and the small amount of
    scattered light cannot be detected except by very
    sensitive instruments. The scattering of light by
    colloids, known as the Tyndall effect, was first
    explained by the British physicist John Tyndall.
    When an ultramicroscope (see microscope) is used
    to examine a colloid, the colloidal particles
    appear as tiny points of light in constant
    motion this motion, called Brownian movement,
    helps keep the particles in suspension.
    Absorption is another characteristic of colloids,
    since the finely divided colloidal particles have
    a large surface area exposed. The presence of
    colloidal particles has little effect on the
    colligative properties (boiling point, freezing
    point, etc.) of a solution.

33
Properties of Colloids
  • The particles of a colloid selectively absorb
    ions and acquire an electric charge. All of the
    particles of a given colloid take on the same
    charge (either positive or negative) and thus are
    repelled by one another. If an electric potential
    is applied to a colloid, the charged colloidal
    particles move toward the oppositely charged
    electrode this migration is called
    electrophoresis. If the charge on the particles
    is neutralized, they may precipitate out of the
    suspension. A colloid may be precipitated by
    adding another colloid with oppositely charged
    particles the particles are attracted to one
    another, coagulate, and precipitate out. Addition
    of soluble ions may precipitate a colloid the
    ions in seawater precipitate the colloidal silt
    dispersed in river water, forming a delta. A
    method developed by F. G. Cottrell reduces air
    pollution by removing colloidal particles (e.g.,
    smoke, dust, and fly ash) from exhaust gases with
    electric precipitators. Particles in a lyophobic
    system are readily coagulated and precipitated,
    and the system cannot easily be restored to its
    colloidal state. A lyophilic colloid does not
    readily precipitate and can usually be restored
    by the addition of solvent.

34
Interaction between colloid particles
  • The following forces play an important role in
    the interaction of colloid particles
  • Excluded Volume Repulsion This refers to the
    impossibility of any overlap between hard
    particles.
  • Electrostatic interaction Colloidal particles
    often carry an electrical charge and therefore
    attract or repel each other. The charge of both
    the continuous and the dispersed phase, as well
    as the mobility of the phases are factors
    affecting this interaction.
  • van der Waals forces This interaction is due to
    induced dipole-dipole interaction. Even if the
    particles don't have a permanent dipole,
    fluctuations of the electron density gives rise
    to a temporary dipole, meaning that van der Waals
    forces are always present, although possibly at a
    much lower magnitude than others.
  • Entropic forces According to the second law of
    thermodynamics, a system progresses to a state in
    which entropy is maximized. This can result in
    effective forces even between hard spheres.
  • Steric forces between polymer-covered surfaces or
    in solutions containing non-adsorbing polymer can
    modulate interparticle forces, producing an
    additional repulsive steric stabilization force
    or attractive depletion force between them.

35
Stabilization of Colloid Suspensions
  • Stabilization serves to prevent colloids from
    aggregating. Steric stabilization and
    electrostatic stabilization are the two main
    mechanisms for colloid stabilization.
    Electrostatic stabilization is based on the
    mutual repulsion of like electrical charges.
    Different phases generally have different charge
    affinities, so that a charge double-layer forms
    at any interface. Small particle sizes lead to
    enormous surface areas, and this effect is
    greatly amplified in colloids. In a stable
    colloid, mass of a dispersed phase is so low that
    its buoyancy or kinetic energy is too little to
    overcome the electrostatic repulsion between
    charged layers of the dispersing phase. The
    charge on the dispersed particles can be observed
    by applying an electric field all particles
    migrate to the same electrode and therefore must
    all have the same sign charge.

36
Destabilizing a Colloidal Suspension
  • Unstable colloidal suspensions form flocs as the
    particles aggregate due to inter-particle
    attractions. This can be accomplished by a number
    of different methods
  • Removal of the electrostatic barrier that
    prevents aggregation of the particles. This can
    be accomplished by the addition of salt to a
    suspension or changing the pH of a suspension to
    effectively neutralize or "screen" the surface
    charge of the particles in suspension. This
    removes the repulsive forces that keep colloidal
    particles separate and allows for coagulation due
    to van der Waals forces.
  • Addition of a charged polymer flocculant. Polymer
    flocculants can bridge individual colloidal
    particles by attractive electrostatic
    interactions. For example, negatively charged
    colloidal silica particles can be flocculated by
    the addition of a positively charged polymer.
  • Addition of nonadsorbed polymers called
    depletants that cause aggregation due to entropic
    effects.

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