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Properties of Solutions Solution: Homogenous mixture of 2 or more substances Solutions can be liquid, solid or gaseous Examples: Ocean, sugar water Gold alloy Air, humid oxygen. Solvent: Substance present in a solution in the greatest amount
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Properties of Solutions Solution: Homogenous mixture of 2 or more substances Solutions can be liquid, solid or gaseous Examples: Ocean, sugar water Gold alloy Air, humid oxygen
Solvent: Substance present in a solution in the greatest amount Example: Water in the ocean; nitrogen in air Solute: Substance present in a solution in lesser amounts than the solvent Example: Salt in ocean; oxygen in air Solutes can be electrolytes or nonelectrolytes Electrolytes: solutes that dissociate in solution into ions that carry charge (ionic compounds) Nonelectrolytes: solutes that do not dissociate in solution, and do not carry any charge
Colloid: Homogenous mixture of 2 or more substances in which the substances are larger than those in solutions Suspension: Heterogeneous mixture, with very large particles capable of settling out of solution Solubility Soluble substance: Substance that is able to dissolve in a solvent Insoluble substance: Substance that does not dissolve in a solvent
Solubility: Maximum amount of solute that can be dissolved in a specific amount of solvent under specific conditions of temperature and pressure • Saturated Solution: Solution containing maximum amount of solute that will dissolve under current conditions • Supersaturated Solution: Unstable solution containing amount of solute greater than the solubility value
Solubility of liquids and solids in water typically increases with increasing temperature • Example: More sugar will dissolve in warm water than in cold water • Solubility of gases in water decreases with temperature • Solubility of gases in water increases with increasing pressure (Henry’s Law)
“Like dissolves like:” • polar solvents will dissolve polar solutes • nonpolar solvents will dissolve nonpolar solutes • Examples: wax in CCl4, sugar in water; oil in water? • Solutes fail to dissolve when: • 1) forces between solute particles out-weigh attractions between solute and solvent • 2) solvent particles are more attracted to each other than to solute
Examples of Like Dissolves Like Solvents Solutes Water (polar) Ni(NO3)2 (ionic) CH2Cl2 (nonpolar) I2 (nonpolar)
Solutes dissolve faster when: Concentration: Relationship between amount of solute contained in a specific amount of solution • Solute particles are small • Solvent is heated • Solution is stirred
Concentration as Percent • Percent: Solution concentration giving the amount of solute in 100 parts of solution • % = part/total x 100 • Weight/weight percent: Concentration giving the mass of solute in 100 mass units of solution • %(w/w) = solute mass/solution mass x 100 • Example: 12.0%(w/w) sugar solution • 12 g sugar per 100 g solution
Weight/volume percent: Concentration giving the grams of solute contained in 100 mL of solution • %(w/v) = grams solute/mL solution x 100 • Example: 12.0%(w/v) sugar solution • 12 g sugar per 100 mL solution
Molarity: Unit of concentration used with solutions; number of moles of solute per liter of solution • Molarity (M) = moles of solute/liters of solution • Examples: 2 moles of NaCl dissolved in 1 L of water • M = 2 moles/1 L = 2 M • 1.5 moles NaCl dissolved in 2 L of water: • M = 1.50 moles/2.00 L = .750 M
Preparing Solutions • Measure proper amount of solute into container, then add solvent to proper volume. • Example: 1 L of 1.50 M CoCl2 Solution • M = moles/Liter M x Liter = moles • 1.5 moles/L x 1L = 1.5 moles needed • 1.5 moles CoCl2 = 195g CoCl2 • 1.5 mol CoCl2 x 130 g CoCl2/mol = 195g CoCl2 • Place 195 g CoCl2 in a flask. Add water to fill to 1-L mark
Dilute a more concentrated solution with solvent to give a solution of lower concentration. • M1 V1 =M2 V2 • Example: Prepare 250 mL of 0.100 M NaCl solution from a 2.00 M NaCl solution. • M1 = molarity of starting solution (in this case 2.00M NaCl) • V1 = volume of starting solution required (always unknown) • M2 = molarity of final solution after dilution (in this case 0.100M NaCl) • V2 = volume of final solution, after dilution (in this case 250ml)
Use M1 V1 = M2 V2 to solve for the unknown variable (V1); this is the amount of the starting solution you need. Add solvent (usually water) to reach the desired total volume (V2). Prepare 250 mL of 0.100 M NaCl solution from a 2.00 M NaCl solution. M1 = molarity of starting solution (in this case 2.00M NaCl) V1 = volume of starting solution required (always unknown) M2 = molarity of final solution after dilution (in this case 0.100M NaCl) V2 = volume of final solution, after dilution (in this case 250ml) Answer: Prepare solution by adding 0.0125 L of 2.0 M NaCl to flask and adding water up to 250 mL mark.
Osmotic Pressure Osmosis: Movement of water through a semipermeable membrane, from more dilute solution towards more concentrated solution Osmotic pressure: amount of pressure required to stop flow of water due to osmosis Isotonic solutions: solutions with identical osmotic pressure; no urge for water to flow
Example: During osmosis, water flows across the semi-permeable membrane from the 4% starch solution into the 10% solution. 4% starch 10% starch H2O
Eventually, the flow of water across the semi- permeable membrane becomes equal in both directions. 7% starch 7% starch H2O
Hypotonic solution: the more dilute of 2 solutions separated by a semipermeable membrane; water leaves this solution and flows across membrane to the more concentrated solution Hypertonic solutions: the more concentrated of 2 solutions separated by a semipermeable membrane; water enters this solution, moving across the membrane from the more dilute solution Crenate Burst No Change (hypertonic) (hypotonic) (isotonic)
Practice with Molarity • Calculate the molarity of 1.50 L of solution containing 0.294 moles of solute • Calculate the molarity of 500 mL of solution containing 0.304 moles of solute
Calculate the molarity of a 100 mL solution containing 4 g of NaOH. How would you make 100 mL of 0.25 M Na2SO4 solution? How would you prepare 5 L of 6 M H2SO4 from 18 M H2SO4 solution?