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Ways of Expressing Concentration

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Fructose, C6H12O6, is a sugar occurring in honey and fruits. How much water should be added to 1.75 g of fructose to give a 0.125 m solution? ... Recall Dalton's Law: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ways of Expressing Concentration


1
Ways of Expressing Concentration
  • Mole Fraction, Molarity, and Molality
  • We define
  • Converting between molarity (M) and molality (m)
    requires density.

2
Solution Concentration
  • Fructose, C6H12O6, is a sugar occurring in honey
    and fruits. How much water should be added to
    1.75 g of fructose to give a 0.125 m solution?

3
Solution Concentration
  • Convert mass of fructose to moles and then
    multiply by 1 kg H2O per 0.125 mol fructose (the
    reciprocal of molality).

1 mol fruct.
1 kg H2O
1.75 g fruct.
x
x
180.16 g fruct.
0.125 mol fruct.
0.077708 kg (77.7 g H2O)
4
Ways of Expressing Concentration
Mole Fraction, Molarity, and Molality
5
Saturated Solutions and Solubility
  • Mole Fraction, Molarity, and Molality
  • Dissolve solute solvent ? solution.
  • Crystallization solution ? solute solvent.
  • Saturation crystallization and dissolution are
    in equilibrium.
  • Solubility amount of solute required to form a
    saturated solution.
  • Supersaturated a solution formed when more
    solute is dissolved than in a saturated solution.

6
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Solute-Solvent Interactions
  • Polar liquids tend to dissolve in polar solvents.
  • Miscible liquids mix in any proportions.
  • Immiscible liquids do not mix.
  • Intermolecular forces are important water and
    ethanol are miscible because the broken hydrogen
    bonds in both pure liquids are re-established in
    the mixture.
  • The number of carbon atoms in a chain affect
    solubility the more C atoms the less soluble in
    water.

7
Factors Affecting Solubility
Solute-Solvent Interactions
8
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Solute-Solvent Interactions
  • The number of -OH groups within a molecule
    increases solubility in water.

9
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Solute-Solvent Interactions
  • Generalization like dissolves like.
  • The more polar bonds in the molecule, the better
    it dissolves in a polar solvent.
  • The less polar the molecule the less it dissolves
    in a polar solvent and the better is dissolves in
    a non-polar solvent.
  • Network solids do not dissolve because the strong
    intermolecular forces in the solid are not
    re-established in any solution.

10
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Pressure Effects
  • Solubility of a gas in a liquid is a function of
    the pressure of the gas.
  • The higher the pressure, the more molecules of
    gas are close to the solvent and the greater the
    chance of a gas molecule striking the surface and
    entering the solution.
  • Therefore, the higher the pressure, the greater
    the solubility.
  • The lower the pressure, the fewer molecules of
    gas are close to the solvent and the lower the
    solubility.

11
Factors Affecting Solubility
Pressure Effects
12
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Pressure Effects
  • Henrys Law
  • Cg is the solubility of gas, Pg the partial
    pressure, k Henrys law constant.
  • Carbonated beverages are bottled under gt
    1 atm. As the bottle is opened,
    decreases and the solubility of CO2 decreases.
    Therefore, bubbles of CO2 escape from solution.

13
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Temperature Effects
  • Experience tells us that sugar dissolves better
    in warm water than cold.
  • As temperature increases, solubility of solids
    generally increases.
  • Sometimes, solubility decreases as temperature
    increases (e.g. Ce2(SO4)3).

14
Factors Affecting Solubility
Temperature Effects
15
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Temperature Effects
  • Experience tells us that carbonated beverages go
    flat as they get warm.

16
Factors Affecting Solubility
  • Temperature Effects
  • Experience tells us that carbonated beverages go
    flat as they get warm.
  • Gases are less soluble at higher temperatures.
  • Thermal pollution if lakes get too warm, CO2 and
    O2 become less soluble and are not available for
    plants or animals.

17
Colligative Properties
  • Colligative properties depend on quantity of
    solute molecules. (E.g. freezing point
    depression and boiling point elevation.)
  • Lowering the Vapor Pressure
  • Non-volatile solvents reduce the ability of the
    surface solvent molecules to escape the liquid.
  • Therefore, vapor pressure is lowered.
  • The amount of vapor pressure lowering depends on
    the amount of solute.

18
Colligative Properties
Lowering the Vapor Pressure
19
Colligative Properties
  • Raoults Law
  • Raoults Law PA is the vapor pressure with
    solute, PA? is the vapor pressure without
    solvent, and ?A is the mole fraction of A, then
  • Recall Daltons Law
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