Title: The Characteristics of a Soln
1The Characteristics of a Soln
- A homogenous mixture.
- A sample of matter containing two or more
substances that has a uniform appearance and
uniform properties throughout. - Solid solution examples Steel, brass, bronze
- Liquid solution examples Alcohol in water,
sugar water, coffee - Gaseous solution examples An air sample, any
mixture of gases
2Solution Terminology
- Solute
- The substance present in a relatively small
amount in a solution the solid or gas when a
substance in that state is dissolved in a liquid
to make a solution. - Solvent
- The substance present in a relatively large
amount in a solution the liquid when a solid or
gas is dissolved to make a solution.
3Microscopic View of a Soln
4Solution Terminology
- Concentrated Solution
- Has a relatively large quantity of a specific
solute - per unit amount of solution.
- Dilute Solution
- Has a relatively small amount of a specific
solute - per unit amount of solution.
5Solution Concentration
AgNO3 (aq) Cu0
Cu(NO3)2 (aq) Ag0
6Solution Terminology
- Solubility
- A measure of how much solute will dissolve in a
given - amount of solvent at a given temperature.
- Saturated
- A solution whose concentration is at the
- solubility limit for a given temperature.
- Unsaturated
- A solution whose concentration is less than the
- solubility limit for a given temperature.
7Solution Terminology
Supersaturated A solution whose concentration
is greater than the normal solubility limit.
8Solution Terminology
- Miscible (Soluble) OR Immiscible (Insoluble)
- (usually in reference to solutions of liquids in
liquids).
9The Formation of a Solution
10The Formation of a Solution
- Development of Equilibrium in Forming a Saturated
Solution - Dissolving rate
- If temperature is held constant, the rate of
dissolving - per unit of solute surface is constant.
- Crystallization rate
- The rate per unit of surface area increases as
the solution concentration at the surface
increases. - Dynamic equilibrium
- Dissolving rate is equal to crystallization rate.
11The Formation of a Solution
Dynamic equilibrium
12Determination of Solubility
- The extent to which a particular solute dissolves
in a given solvent depends on three factors - The strength of intermolecular forces within the
solute, within the solvent, and between the
solute and the solvent - The partial pressure of a solute gas over a
liquid solvent - The temperature
- Golden Rule of Solubility LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE
13Determination of Solubility
Miscible- dipole forces and H-bonding
Immiscible- London forces only
14Pressure and Solubility
The solubility of a gaseous solute in a liquid is
directly proportional to the partial pressure of
the gas over the surface of the liquid.
15Temperature and Solubility
The solubility of most solids increases with
rising temperature
16Concentration Units
- Solution Concentration
- In general, concentration is
17Percentage by Mass
- Example
- A solution is prepared by dissolving 1.23 g of
sodium chloride in 500.0 mL of water. What is the
percentage by mass? - Solution The density of water is 1 g/mL.
18Molarity
Molarity, M Moles of solute per liter of
solution
Molarity Calc Example 1 Calculate the
molarity of a solution prepared by dissolving
0.345 moles of NaCl in sufficient water to give
525 mL of solution. 0.345 mol / 0.525 L 0.657
M (be sure to convert mL to Liters)
19Molarity
- Molarity Calc Example 2
- Calculate the molarity of a solution made by
dissolving 13.0 grams of sugar, C12H22O11, in
enough water to make 4.00 ? 102 milliliters of
solution. - (convert grams to moles and mL to L)
- 0.0950 mol C12H22O11/L 0.0950 M C12H22O11
20Molarity
- Example using molarity as a conversion factor
- How many moles of methanol are in 45.3 mL of
0.550 M CH3OH? - 0.0249 mol CH3OH
21Molarity
- To prepare a solution of a specified molarity
- Weigh the appropriate amount of solute.
- Add less than the total volume of solvent.
- Mix to completely dissolve the solute.
- Add additional solvent until the total solution
volume is appropriate.
22Molarity- Using Volumetric Glassware
23Molality
- Molality, m
- The number of moles of solute dissolved
- in one kilogram of solvent
- Molarity (mol/L) is temperature dependent
- molality is temperature independent.
24Molality
- Calculate the molality of a solution that
contains 7.72 g of NaBr in 500 mL of water. - First convert grams to moles
- Then calculate molality
25Normality
- Normality, N
- The number of equivalents, eq, per liter of
solution
Stop Here
26Normality
- Equivalent, eq
- One equivalent of acid is the quantity that
yields - one mole of hydrogen ions in a chemical reaction.
- Once equivalent of base is the quantity that
reacts - with one mole of hydrogen ions.
27Normality
- eq acid/mol eq base/mol
- H3X NaOH NaH2X H2O 1 1
- H3X 2 NaOH Na2HX 2 H2O 2 1
- H3X 3 NaOH Na3X 3 H2O 3 1
- 2 HY Ba(OH)2 BaY2 2 H2O 1 2
- The number of equivalents of acid and base
- in each equation is the same.
28Solution Concentration
- General Form for Solution Concentration Ratios
29Solution Concentration
30Dilution of Solutions
- Concentrated solutions are diluted by
- adding more solvent particles.
- The number of solute particles remains the
- same before and after a dilution
31Dilution of Solutions
32Dilution of Solutions
- Example
- If 10.0 mL of a 16-M nitric acid solution is
diluted to 1.00 L, what is the molar
concentration of the dilute solution? - Solution
- Solve with algebra.
- M1 16 M M2 ?
- V1 10.0 mL V2 1.00 L
33Dilution of Solutions
- Example
- If 10.0 mL of a 16-M nitric acid solution is
diluted to 1.00 L, what is the molar
concentration of the dilute solution? - M1 16 M M2 ?
- V1 10.0 mL V2 1.00 L
34Dilution of Solutions
35Solution Stoichiometry
- For any reaction whose equation is known,
- the three steps for solving a stoichiometry
problem are - Convert the quantity of given species to moles.
- Convert the moles of given species to moles of
wanted species. - Convert the moles of wanted species to the
quantity units required (usually volume, i.e.,
mL).
36Solution Stoichiometry
37Solution Stoichiometry
- Example
- Aluminum shavings are dropped into 500.0 mL of
0.77 M hydrochloric acid until the reaction is
complete. How many grams of hydrogen are
produced? - Solution
- Solve with dimensional analysis.
- 2 Al 6 HCl 2 AlCl3 3 H2
- GIVEN 500.0 mL of 0.77 M HCl WANTED g H2
38Solution Stoichiometry
- Aluminum shavings are dropped into 500.0 mL of
0.77 M hydrochloric acid until the reaction is
complete. How many grams of hydrogen are
produced? - 2 Al 6 HCl 2 AlCl3 3 H2
- GIVEN 500.0 mL of 0.77 M HCl WANTED g H2
- PER 0.77 mol HCl/1000 mL
- PATH mL
mol HCl - 6 mol HCl/3 mol H2 2.016 g H2/mol H2
- mol H2
g H2
39Solution Stoichiometry
- Aluminum shavings are dropped into 500.0 mL of
0.77 M hydrochloric acid until the reaction is
complete. How many grams of hydrogen are
produced? - 2 Al 6 HCl 2 AlCl3 3 H2
- GIVEN 500.0 mL of 0.77 M HCl WANTED g H2
-
40Titration Using Molarity
- Titration
- The very careful addition of one solution to
another - by means of a device that can measure
- delivered volume precisely, such as a buret.
41Titration Using Molarity
42Titration Using Molarity
- Buret
- A glass tube of uniform width calibrated to
accurately measure volume of liquid delivered
through an adjustable-flow stopcock at the bottom
of the tube. - Indicator
- A substance that changes from one color to
another, - used to signal the end of a titration.
43Titration Using Molarity
- Standardize
- Determination of the concentration of a solution
to be used in a titration by titrating it against
a primary standard. - Primary Standard
- A soluble solid of reasonable cost that is very
stable and pure, preferably with a high molar
mass, that can be weighed accurately for use in a
titration.
44Titration Using Molarity
- Example
- A student titrates 17.5 mL of 0.387 M nitric acid
solution into a 25.0-mL sample of barium
hydroxide solution. What is the molar
concentration of the barium hydroxide solution? - Solution
- A titration is a solution stoichiometry problem.
Use dimensional analysis to find mol Ba(OH)2 and
algebra to find the molarity. - GIVEN 17.5 mL of 0.387 M HNO3 WANTED M Ba(OH)2
- 2 HNO3 Ba(OH)2 2 H2O Ba(NO3)2
45Titration Using Molarity
- A student titrates 17.5 mL of 0.387 M nitric acid
solution into a 25.0-mL sample of barium
hydroxide solution. What is the molar
concentration of the barium hydroxide solution? - GIVEN 17.5 mL of 0.387 M HNO3 WANTED M Ba(OH)2
- 2 HNO3 Ba(OH)2 2 H2O Ba(NO3)2
- PER 0.387 mol HNO3/1000 mL
- PATH mL
mol HNO3 - 1 mol
Ba(OH)2/2 mol HNO3 - mol Ba(OH)2
46Titration Using Molarity
- A student titrates 17.5 mL of 0.387 M nitric acid
solution into a 25.0-mL sample of barium
hydroxide solution. What is the molar
concentration of the barium hydroxide solution? - PER 0.387 mol HNO3/1000 mL
- PATH mL
mol HNO3 - 1 mol
Ba(OH)2/2 mol HNO3 - mol Ba(OH)2
- 0.00339 mol Ba(OH)2
47Titration Using Molarity
- A student titrates 17.5 mL of 0.387 M nitric acid
solution into a 25.0-mL sample of barium
hydroxide solution. What is the molar
concentration of the barium hydroxide solution? - 0.00339 mol Ba(OH)2
- 0.136 mol Ba(OH)2/L 0.136 M Ba(OH)2
48Titration Using Normality
- Goal 17
- Given the volume of a solution that reacts with a
known mass of a primary standard and the equation
for the reaction, calculate the normality of the
solution. - Goal 18
- Given the volumes of two solutions that react
with each other in a titration and the normality
of one solution, calculate the normality of the
second solution.
49Titration Using Normality
- The number of equivalents of all species
- in a reaction is the same.
- For an acidbase reaction,
- equivalents of acid equivalents of base
50Titration Using Normality
- Example
- What is the normality of a sodium hydroxide
solution if 33.16 mL of the solution reacts with
2.88 g of KHC8H4O4 in the reaction NaOH
KHC8H4O4 H2O NaKC8H4O4? - Solution
- Find the number of equivalents with dimensional
analysis, and then use algebra to determine the
normality. - GIVEN 2.88 g KHC8H4O4 WANTED eq
51Titration Using Normality
- What is the normality of a sodium hydroxide
solution if 33.16 mL of the solution reacts with
2.88 g of KHC8H4O4 in the reaction NaOH
KHC8H4O4 H2O NaKC8H4O4? - 0.425 eq/L 0.425 N
52Titration Using Normality
- Example
- 23.91 mL of the 0.425 N sodium hydroxide solution
from the previous example is used to titrate a
30.0-mL sample of phosphoric acid in the reaction
NaOH H3PO4 H2O NaH2PO4. What is the
normality of the acid? - Solution
- Since the number of equivalents of all species in
a reaction is the same, V1N1 eq V2N2
53Titration Using Normality
- Example
- 23.91 mL of the 0.425 N sodium hydroxide solution
from the previous example is used to titrate a
30.0-mL sample of phosphoric acid in the reaction
NaOH H3PO4 H2O NaH2PO4. What is the
normality of the acid? - V1N1 eq V2N2
54Colligative Properties
- Goal 19
- Given (a) the molality of a solution, or data
from which it may be found, (b) the normal
freezing or boiling point of the solvent, and c
the freezing- or boiling-point constant, find the
freezing or boiling point of the solution. - Goal 20
- Given the freezing-point depression or
boiling-point elevation and the molality of a
solution, or data from which they may be found,
calculate the molal freezing-point constant or
molal boiling-point constant.
55Colligative Properties
- Goal 21
- Given (a) the mass of solute and solvent in a
solution, (b) the freezing-point depression or
boiling-point elevation, or data from which they
may be found, and c the molal
freezing/boiling-point constant of the solvent,
find the approximate molar mass of the solute.
56Colligative Properties
- A pure solvent has distinct physical properties.
- Introducing a solute into the solvent affects
these properties. - In dilute solutions of certain solutes, the
change in - some of these properties is proportional
- to the molal concentration of the solute
particles. - Colligative Property
- Solution property that is determined only by the
number of solute particles dissolved in a fixed
quantity of solvent and not by the identity of
the solute particles.
57Colligative Properties
- Boiling Point Elevation
- The boiling point of a solution is higher
- than the boiling point of the pure solvent.
- Example
- The normal boiling point of water is 100.0C.
- The normal boiling point of a 1 m
- solution of sugar water is 100.5C.
58Colligative Properties
- Freezing Point Depression
- The freezing point of a solution is lower
- than the freezing point of the pure solvent.
- Example
- The normal freezing point of water is 0.0C.
- The normal boiling point of a 1 m
- solution of sugar water is 1.9C.
59Colligative Properties
60Colligative Properties
- Boiling point elevation and freezing point
depression - are colligative properties
- They depend on the number of solute
- particles but not their identity.
- ?Tb change in boiling temperature
- ?Tf change in freezing temperature
61Colligative Properties
- ?Tb ? m ?Tf ? m
- The proportionality constants are
- Kb molal boiling-point elevation constant
- Kf molal freezing-point depression constant
- ?Tb Kb ? m ?Tf Kf ? m
62Colligative Properties
- Molal Boiling-Point Elevation Constant Values
- Substance Boiling Point (C) Kb (C/m)
- Benzene 80 2.5
- Carbon disulfide 46 2.4
- Carbon tetrachloride 77 5.0
- Water 100 0.52
- Molal Freezing-Point Depression Constant Values
- Substance Freezing Point (C) Kf (C/m)
- Benzene 6 5.1
- Carbon disulfide 112 3.8
- Carbon tetrachloride 23 30
- Water 0 1.86
63Colligative Properties
- Example
- What is the freezing point of a solution made by
adding 10.0 g of glucose, C6H12O6, to 7.50 ? 102
grams of water? - Solution
- Determine the solution molality, and then apply
?Tf Kf ? m. - GIVEN 10.0 g C6H12O6, 7.50 ? 102 g H2O
- WANTED m C6H12O6
- PER 180.16 g C6H12O6/mol
C6H12O6 - PATH g C6H12O6
mol C6H12O6
64Colligative Properties
- Example
- What is the freezing point of a solution made by
adding 10.0 g of glucose, C6H12O6, to 7.50 ? 102
grams of water? - PER 180.16 g C6H12O6/mol
C6H12O6 - PATH g C6H12O6
mol C6H12O6
65Colligative Properties
66Colligative Properties
- Procedure
- How to Calculate the Molar Mass of a Solute from
- Freezing-Point Depression or Boiling-Point
Elevation Data - Calculate molality from m ?Tf/Kf or m ?Tb/Kb.
Express as mol solute/kg solvent. - Using molality as a conversion factor between
moles of solute and kilograms of solvent, find
the number of moles of solute. - Use the defining equation for molar mass, MM
g/mol, to calculate the molar mass of the solute.
67Colligative Properties
- Example
- When 31.5 g of a solute is dissolved in 4.00 ?
102 g of water, the freezing point of the
resulting solution is 1.22C. What is the molar
mass of the solute? - Solution
- Follow the three-step procedure.
- Step 1 Calculate molality ?Tf Kf ? m
68Colligative Properties
- Example
- When 31.5 g of a solute is dissolved in 4.00 ?
102 g of water, the freezing point of the
resulting solution is 1.22C. What is the molar
mass of the solute? - Step 1 Calculate molality 0.656 m 0.656 mol
solute/kg solvent - Step 2 Determine the moles of solute
- 0.262 mol solute
69Colligative Properties
- Example
- When 31.5 g of a solute is dissolved in 4.00 ?
102 g of water, the freezing point of the
resulting solution is 1.22C. What is the molar
mass of the solute? - Step 2 Determine the moles of solute 0.262 mol
solute - Step 3 Calculate molar mass by using its
definition