Title: Announcements
1Announcements
- Homework
- Chapter 4
- 8, 11, 13, 17, 19, 22
- Chapter 6
- 6, 9, 14, 15
24-8
- Meaning of Confidence interval?
- Is an interval around the experimental mean that
most likely contains the true mean (m).
3Homework
4Question 4-13.
- 4-13. A trainee in a medical lab will be
released to work on her own when her results
agree with those of an experienced worker at the
95 confidence interval. Results for a blood
urea nitrogen analysis are shown . - What does abbreviation dL refer to?
- dL deciliter 0.1 L 100 mL
- b) Should the trainee work alone?
5Comparison of Means with Students t
Is there a significant difference?
First you must ask, is there a significant
difference in their standard deviations?
f-test
YES
NO
6- 4-13. dL deciliter 0.1 L 100 mL
Ftable 6.26
No difference
Find spooled and t
7ttable 2.262
No significant difference between two workers
Therefore trainee should be Released
8Homework
- 4-17. If you measure a quantity four times and
the standard deviation is 1.0 of the average,
can you be 90 confident that the true value is
within 1.2 of the measured average
Yes
9Homework
- 4-19. Hydrocarbons in the cab of an automobile
Do the results differ at 95 CL? 99 CL?
Ftable 1.84
No Difference
Find spooled and t
10Homework
The table gives t for 60 degrees of freedom,
which is close to 62. ttable 1.671 and 2.000 at
the 90 and 95 CL, respectively.
The difference IS significant at both confidence
levels.
11- 4-22. Q-test, Is 216 rejectable?
- 192, 216, 202, 195, 204
Qtable 0.64
Retain the outlier 216
12Chapter 6
13Chemical Equilibrium
- Equilibrium Constant
- Equilibrium and Thermodynamics
- Enthalpy
- Entropy
- Free Energy
- Le Chateliers Principle
- Solubility product (Ksp)
- Common Ion Effect
- Separation by precipitation
- Complex formation
14Example
- The equilibrium constant for the reaction
- H2O H OH-
Kw 1.0 x 10-14
KNH3 1.8 x 10-5
K3 ?
15Equilibrium and Thermodynamics
16Equilibrium and Thermodynamics
- enthalpy gt H
- enthalpy change gt DH
- exothermic vs. endothermic
- entropy gt S
- free energy
- Gibbs free energy gt G
- Gibbs free energy change gt DG
17Equilibrium and Thermodynamics
- DGo DHo - TDSo
- DGo -RT ln (K)
- K e-(DGo/RT)
18Equilibrium and Thermodynamics
- The case of HCl
- HCl H Cl-
K?
- DHo -74.83 x 103 J/mol
- DS0 -130.4 kJ/mol
- DGo DHo - TDSo
- DGo (-74.83 kJ/mol) (298.15 K) (-130.4
kJ/mol) - DGo -35.97 kJ/mol
19Equilibrium and Thermodynamics
- The case of HCl
- HCl H Cl-
K?
- DGo (-74.83 kJ/mol) (298.15 K) (-130.4
kJ/mol) - DGo -35.97 kJ/mol
20Predicting the direction in which an equilibrium
will initially move
- LeChateliers Principle and Reaction Quotient
21Le Chatelier's Principle
- If a stress, such as a change in concentration,
pressure, temperature, etc., is applied to a
system at equilibrium, the equilibrium will shift
in such a way as to lessen the effect of the
stress. - Stresses
- Adding or removing reactants or products
- Changing system equilibrium temperature
- Changing pressure (depends on how the change is
accomplished
22Consider
- 6CO2 (g) 6 H2O(g) C6H12O6(s) 6O2(g)
Predict in which direction the equilibrium moves
as a result of the following stress
Increasing CO2
23Consider
- 6CO2 (g) 6 H2O(g) C6H12O6(s) 6O2(g)
Predict in which direction the equilibrium moves
as a result of the following stress
Increasing O2
24Consider
- 6CO2 (g) 6 H2O(g) C6H12O6(s) 6O2(g)
Predict in which direction the equilibrium moves
as a result of the following stress
Decreasing H2O
25Consider
- 6CO2 (g) 6 H2O(g) C6H12O6(s) 6O2(g)
NO CHANGE
Predict in which direction the equilibrium moves
as a result of the following stress
Removing C6H12O6(s)
K does not depend on concentration of solid
C6H12O6
26Consider
- 6CO2 (g) 6 H2O(g) C6H12O6(s) 6O2(g)
Predict in which direction the equilibrium moves
as a result of the following stress
Compressing the system
System shifts towards the direction which
occupies the smallest volume. Fewest moles of
gas.
27Consider
- 6CO2 (g) 6 H2O(g) C6H12O6(s) 6O2(g)
DH 2816 kJ
Predict in which direction the equilibrium moves
as a result of the following stress
Increasing system temperature
System is endothermic heat must go into the
system (think of it as a reactant)
28Consider this
- CoCl2 (g) Co (g) Cl2(g)
- When COCl2 is 3.5 x 10-3 M, CO is 1.1 x 10-5
M, and Cl2 is 3.25 x 10-6M is the system at
equilibrium? - Q Reaction quotient
-
K2.19 x 10-10
29Compare Q and K
Q 1.02 x 10-8 K 2.19 x 10-10 System is not at
equilibrium, if it were the ratio would be
2.19x10-10 When
QgtK TOO MUCH PRODUCT TO BE AT
EQUILIRBIUM Equilibrium moves to the left
QltK TOO MUCH REACTANT TO BE AT
EQUILIRBIUM Equilibrium moves to the Right
QK System is at Equilibrium
30Solubility Product
31Solubility Product
- solubility-product
- the product of the solubilities
- solubility-product constant gt Ksp
- constant that is equal to the solubilities of
the ions produced when a substance dissolves
32Solubility Product
- In General
- AxBy ltgt xAy yB-x
- Ayx B-xy
- K ------------
- AxBy
- AxBy K Ksp Ayx B-xy
33Solubility Product
- For silver sulfate
- Ag2SO4 (s) ltgt 2 Ag(aq) SO4-2(aq)
34Solubility of a Precipitatein Pure Water
- EXAMPLE How many grams of AgCl (fw 143.32)
can be dissolved in 100. mL of water at 25oC? - AgCl ltgt Ag Cl-
- Ksp AgCl- 1.82 X 10-10 (Appen. F)
- let x molar solubility Ag Cl-
35EXAMPLE How many grams of AgCl (fw 143.32)
can be dissolved in 100. mL of water at 25oC?
Initial Some - -
Change -x x x
Equilibrium -x x x
(x)(x) Ksp AgCl- 1.82 X 10-10
x 1.35 X 10-5M
36EXAMPLE How many grams of AgCl (fw 143.32)
can be dissolved in 100. mL of water at 25oC?
x 1.35 X 10-5M
- How many grams is that in 100 ml?
- grams (M.W.) (Volume) (Molarity)
- 143.32 g mol-1 (.100 L) (1.35 x
10-5 mol L-1) - 1.93X10-4 g 0.193 mg
37The Common Ion Effect
38The Common Ion Effect
- common ion effect
- a salt will be less soluble if one of its
constituent ions is already present in the
solution
39The Common Ion Effect
- EXAMPLE Calculate the molar solubility of
Ag2CO3 in a solution that is 0.0200 M in Na2CO3. - Ag2CO3 ltgt 2 Ag CO3-2
- Ksp Ag2CO3-2 8.1 X 10-12
40EXAMPLE Calculate the molar solubility of
Ag2CO3 in a solution that is 0.0200 M in Na2CO3.
Initial Solid - 0.0200M
Change -x 2x x
Equilibrium Solid 2x 0.0200x
Ksp(2x)2(0.0200M x) 8.1 X 10-12
4x2(0.0200M x) 8.1 X 10-12
41EXAMPLE Calculate the molar solubility of
Ag2CO3 in a solution that is 0.0200 M in Na2CO3.
- 4x2(0.0200M x) 8.1 X 10-12
- no exact solution to a 3rd order equation, need
to make some approximation
- first, assume the X is very small compared to
0.0200 M
4X2(0.0200M) 8.1 X 10-12
4X2(0.0200M) 8.1 X 10-12
X 1.0 X 10-5 M
42EXAMPLE Calculate the molar solubility of
Ag2CO3 in a solution that is 0.0200 M in Na2CO3.
- X 1.0 X 10-5 M
- (1.3 X 10-4 M in pure water)
Second check assumption
- CO3-2 0.0200 M X 0.0200 M
0.0200 M 0.00001M 0.0200M
Assumption is ok!
43Separation by Precipitation
44Separation by Precipitation
- Complete separation can mean a lot we should
define complete. - Complete means that the concentration of the less
soluble material has decreased to 1 X 10-6M or
lower before the more soluble material begins to
precipitate
45Separation by Precipitation
- EXAMPLE Can Fe3 and Mg2 be separated
quantitatively as hydroxides from a solution that
is 0.10 M in each cation? If the separation is
possible, what range of OH- concentrations is
permissible. - Two competing reactions
46EXAMPLE Separate Iron and Magnesium?
- Ksp Fe3OH-3 2 X 10-39
- Ksp Mg2OH-2 7.1 X 10-12
- Assume quantitative separation requires that the
concentration of the less soluble material to
have decreased to lt 1 X 10-6M before the more
soluble material begins to precipitate.
47 EXAMPLE Separate Iron and Magnesium?
- Ksp Fe3OH-3 2 X 10-39
- Ksp Mg2OH-2 7.1 X 10-12
Assume Fe3 1.0 X 10-6M
What will be the OH- required to reduce the
Fe3 to Fe3 1.0 X 10-6M ?
48 EXAMPLE Separate Iron and Magnesium?
(1.0 X 10-6M)OH-3 2 X 10-39
49Add OH-
Mg2
Mg2
Fe3
Fe3
Fe3
Fe3
Mg2
Mg2
Mg2
Fe3
Mg2
Fe3
Mg2
Fe3
Mg2
Fe3
Fe3
Fe3
Mg2
Mg2
Mg2
Fe3
Fe3
50Mg2
Mg2
Mg2
Mg2
Mg2
_at_ equilibrium
Fe3
Mg2
What is the OH- when this happens
Mg2
Mg2
Is this OH- (that is in solution) great enough
to start precipitating Mg2?
Mg2
Mg2
Mg2
Fe(OH)3(s)
51 EXAMPLE Separate Iron and Magnesium?
(1.0 X 10-6M)OH-3 2 X 10-39
52 EXAMPLE Separate Iron and Magnesium?
- What OH- is required to begin the precipitation
of Mg(OH)2? - Mg2 0.10 M
-
- Ksp (0.10 M)OH-2 7.1 X 10-12
53EXAMPLE Separate Iron and Magnesium?
_at_ equilibrium
- OH- to completely remove Fe3
- 1.3 X 10-11 M
OH- to start removing Mg2 8.4 X 10-6M
All of the Iron will be precipitated b/f any of
the magnesium starts to precipitate!!