Title: Solutions Test II
1Unit XIV
Objs8,9,12-18
2Obj. 8Precipitates
an insoluble solid that will separate from
a solution during a reaction (double
displacement).
using solubility rules, we can predict
precipitates.
3Obj. 8 cont
precipitate
1
-1
1
-1
LiNO3
AgI
LiI (aq) AgNO3 (aq)
(s)
(aq)
precipitate
1
-1
-2
3
NaOH (aq) Cr2(SO4)3 (aq)
Na2SO4
Cr(OH)3
(aq)
(s)
4Obj. 9Net Ionic Equations
- a net ionic equation shows the chemical change
in a
solution (formation of precipitate).
all soluble (aq) compounds are separated into
ions.
insoluble (s) compounds are written as
compounds.
write the complete ionic equation.
- leave (s) compounds intact.
cross out any spectator ions
- ions that appear on both sides of equation.
5Obj. 9 cont
LiI (aq) AgNO3 (aq)
LiNO3 (aq)
AgI (s)
- write complete ionic equation
Li1
I-1
Ag1
NO3-1
Li1
NO3-1
AgI (s)
- what is left is the net ionic equation!
I-1
Ag1
AgI (s)
NaOH (aq) Cr2(SO4)3 (aq) Na2SO4
(aq)
Cr(OH)3 (s)
Na1
OH-1
Cr3
Cr(OH)3 (s)
SO4-2
Na1
SO4-2
OH-1
Cr3
Cr(OH)3 (s)
6Obj. 12-13Solution Calculations
- we said that dilute and concentrated are very
general terms for solution concentration.
- Molarity indicates how many moles of solute are
dissolved in one liter of solution.
moles
molarity
units M
Liters
What is the molarity of a salt water solution
containing
9.0 moles of salt dissolved in 3.0 liters of
solution?
9.0 moles
3.0 M
3.0 liters
7Obj. 12-13 cont
23
35
What is the molarity of 174 grams of NaCl
dissolved in
500.0 mL of solution?
moles
molarity
Liters
174 grams
1 mole
1000 mL
500.0 mL
1 liter
58 grams NaCl
6.00 M
8Obj. 12-13 cont
- Molality indicates how many moles of solute are
dissolved in one kilogram of solvent.
moles
molality
units m
Kg
59
160
What is the molality of 199 grams of NiBr2 in
500.0
grams of water?
199 grams NiBr2
1 mole
1000 grams
500.0 grams
219 grams NiBr2
1 Kg
1.82 m
9Obj. 12-13 cont
- Other types of solution concentration include
part
mass of solute or solvent
mass
x
100
whole
mass of solution
part (solute)
What is the by mass of 62.0 grams of KCl
dissolved in
475 grams of water?
solvent
part
mass
whole
whole solution
solute solvent!
62.0 475 537 grams of solution
62.0
mass
x
100
11.5
537
10Obj. 12-13 cont
part (solute)
whole (solution)
How many grams of KOH are required to prepare
450.0
grams of a 30.0 solution?
part
x
mass
whole
x
whole
part x whole
whole
KOH
0.300
x
450.0
135 g
pph
parts per hundred
ppt
parts per thousand
parts per million
ppm
11Obj. 12-13 cont
a dilution a solution is made less
concentrated
(weaker) by adding more solvent.
- changes concentration (molarity).
- changes volume of solution.
M1V1 M2V2
initial molarity
final molarity
initial volume
final volume
12Obj. 12-13 cont
M1
V1
- How many liters of a 12M solution are needed to
create
2.0 liters of a 4.0M solution?
M1V1 M2V2
M2
V2
8.0
12
X
12
X
2.0
(4.0)
0.67 liters
X
12
12
V1
M1
- What is the molarity of 1.5 liters of solution
made from
600.0 mL of 10.0M NaOH?
M2
V2
6.0
1.5
X
4.0M
1.5
X
0.6
(10.0)
X
1.5
1.5
13Obj. 12-13 cont
- Some dilution problems may contain
concentrations
instead of molarity
you do NOT have to put in decimal formjust
be consistent!
1
mass1
- How many grams of a 25.0 solution of a KCl are
needed to
prepare 85.0 grams of a 40.0 solution?
2
mass2
1mass1 2mass2
25
X
3400
(40)
25
X
85
136 grams
X
25
25
14Obj. 14Colligative Properties
- Colligative properites are properties of
solutions that are
affected only by the of particles in the
solution.
- NOT affected by the type of particle!!!
vapor pressure (VP)
freezing point (FP)
boiling point (BP)
15Obj. 15Effect of Solutes on Vapor Pressure
- Vapor pressure (VP) is the P exerted at the
surface of a
liquid by particles trying to escape the liquid.
16Obj. 15 cont
- adding a nonvolatile solute to a solvent will
cause the VP of
the solvent to decrease.
solute particles replace some solvent
particles at the
surface of the solution.
less solvent particles on surface less
evaporation
lower VP!
17Obj. 16 and 18How Solutes Affect BP and FP
- Boiling pt. (BP) is temp. at which the VP of the
liquid
atmospheric pressure.
adding solute lowers VP of solvent
must add more KE (heat) to equalize the
pressures
solutes RAISE the BP of solutions!
(i.e. we add salt before we boil water)
pure water
salt water
18Obj. 16 and 18 cont
- Freezing pt. (FP) is temp. at which liquid turns
into a solid.
enough KE is lost (removal of heat) that
molecules stop
moving around and lock into place.
adding solute lowers VP of solvent
even more KE (heat) must be lost to lock
molecules into
place.
solutes LOWER the FP of solutions!
(i.e. we add salt to icy roadssalt is used in
making ice cream )
19Obj. 16 and 18 cont
- Ionic solutes lower the VP of solvents more than
molecular
solutes!
ionic solutes dissociate (break up into ions)
in solvents.
- AlCl3 dissociates into 4 separate ions (1 Al3
and 3 Cl-1)
molecular solutes stay intact in solvents.
- glucose (C6H12O6) breaks into separate units of
C6H12O6
NOT Cs, Hs and Os!
20Obj. 17BP and FP Calculations
- solutes raise (elevate) the BP of solvents.
- to calculate how high the BP is elevated
BP elevation ?TBP
m(KBP) normal BP
given except
BP constant
molality
water 100C
given
- solutes lower (depress) the FP of solvents.
- to calculate how low the FP is depressed
FP depression ?TFP
normal FP - m(KFP)
given except
FP constant
molality
water 0C
given
ionic solutes affect molality!!!
CaCl2 dissociates into 3 ions, so multiply m by 3!
Round all temps. to the hundredths place!
21Obj. 17 cont
If 52.34 grams of NiBr2 dissolve in 392.0 grams
of water, what is the BP of the resulting
solution?
BP m(KBP) normal BP
52.34 g NiBr2
1 mole
1000 g
x 3
1.829 m
0.6097 m
219 g NiBr2
392.0 g water
1 Kg
(ions)
0.936
(0.512)
100C
100.94C
BP
1.829
22Obj. 17 cont
If 95.67 grams of CCl4 dissolve in 981.0 grams of
benzene, what is the FP of the resulting
solution? (FP of Benzene 5.53C)
FP normal FP - m(KFP)
molecular, so dont multiply by anything!
95.67 g CCl4
1 mole
1000 g
0.6416 m
152 g CCl4
981 g benzene
1 Kg
3.285
2.25C
FP
5.53C
(5.12)
- 0.6416