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Chapter Nine Chemical Reactions in Aqueous Solutions. Section 9.1 General Properties of Aqueous Solutions. Review. A solution is a homogeneous mixture Gas example: air Liquid liquid: salt water Solid example: brass Solute: substance being dissolved Typically lesser in quantity
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Review • A solution is a homogeneous mixture • Gas example: air • Liquid liquid: salt water • Solid example: brass • Solute: substance being dissolved • Typically lesser in quantity • Solvent: substance doing the dissolving • Typically greater in quantity
Types of Solutes: Electrolytes vs. Nonelectrolytes • Electrolyte: substance that when dissolved in water conducts electricity • Sodium Chloride (or table salt) • Has ions in solution (dissociation) • Nonelectrolyte: substance that when dissolved in water does NOT conduct electricity • Sucrose (or sugar) • Does NOT have ions in solution, but molecules
Strong vs. Weak Electrolytes • All water-soluble ionic compounds will dissociate completely • Therefore, they are strong electrolytes (i.e. substances that completely dissociate) • There are only 7 molecular compounds that are also considered strong electrolytes • HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, HClO3, HClO4, H2SO4
Strong vs. Weak Electrolytes • Most molecular compounds are weak electrolytes OR nonelectrolytes • Weak electrolytes produce some ions upon dissolving but exist mostly of molecules that aren’t ionized • Acids are electrolytes (they produce H+ ions) • HCl(g) H+(aq) + Cl-(aq) • Bases are electrolytes (they produce OH- ions) • NH3(g) NH4+(aq) + OH-(aq)
Strong vs. Weak Electrolytes • For acids/bases that are WEAK, the reaction goes in both directions simultaneously • HC2H3O2(l) H+(aq) + C2H3O2-(aq) • “” reaction occurs in both directions • Dynamic Chemical Equilibrium • A + B2 AB2
Classify if Strong Electrolyte, Weak Electrolyte, or Nonelectrolyte • Sucrose (C12H22O11) • Fructose (C6H12O6) • Sodium Citrate (Na3C6H5O7) • Potassium Citrate (K3C6H5O7) • Ascorbic Acid (H2C6H6O6)
Precipitation Reactions • Reaction where a “precipitate” forms
Solubility • Maximum amount of solute that will dissolve in a given quantity of solvent at a specific temperature
Molecular, Ionic, & Net Ionic Equations • Pb(NO3)2(aq) + NaI(aq) • Ionic Equation: Shows equation with ions dissociated • Net Ionic Equation: Shows only what’s involved in the reaction • Removes “Spectator Ions”
Group Quiz #1 • For the following reaction, correctly predict the products to write the balanced molecular equation. Then write the ionic equation and the net ionic equation. • Aqueous solutions of Lead Acetate and Calcium Chloride
Acid-Base Models • Arrhenius Model: • Acids produce H+ ions • Bases produce OH- ions • Bronsted Model: • Acids are H+ donors (or proton donors) • Bases are H+ acceptors (or proton acceptors)
Acid-Base Neutralization • Reaction between an acid and base • Produce water (most of the time) and a salt (ionic compound)
Oxidation-Reduction Reactions • A.K.A. “Redox” Reactions • Chemical Reaction where electrons are being transferred from one reactant to another.
Example Redox Reaction • Consider Zn(s) + CuCl2(aq) ZnCl2(aq) + Cu(s)
Some definitions • Oxidation is loss of electrons • Reduction is gain of electrons • “OIL RIG” • Oxidizing Agent: species that causes oxidation • Takes the electrons • Reducing Agent: species that causes reduction • Gives the electrons
Oxidation Numbers • A.K.A. Oxidation State (or charge) • Help us determine what elements were oxidized and reduced • In order to determine an element’s oxidation number, you must follow the guidelines on the next two slides:
Determining Oxidation Numbers • What is the oxidation number of each atom in the following: • SO2 • NaH • CO32- • H2SO4
What is Oxidized and What is Reduced? • 2Fe + 6HBr 3H2 + 2FeBr3 • N2 + 3H2 2NH3 • 2KClO3 2KCl + 3O2
Group Quiz #2 • What is the oxidation number for chlorine in the compound HClO4? • What species is the reducing agent in the following equation? • Mg(s) + 2HCl(aq) MgCl2(aq) + H2(g) • Does the following equation represent a redox reaction? Why? • 2Mg(s) + O2(g) 2MgO(s)
Concentration • Measure of amount of solute dissolved in a certain amount of solvent or solution • More solute: • Concentrated • Less solute: • Diluted
Molarity (One type of concentration) • Molarity = moles of solute/ L of solution • A.K.A. molar concentration • Represented by “M” ex: 1.5 M • If you have exactly 1 L of 1.5 M glucose, it contains 1.5 moles of glucose
Example • Suppose you wanted to make a 0.150 M solution of KMnO4 using a 25o.00 mL volumetric flask. How would you do this?
Group Quiz #3 • You need to make 500. mL of a 0.650 M solution of Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH). What mass of NaOH do you need to use? • What is the molar concentration (M) of a solution prepared by dissolving 58.50 g of Copper Chloride (CuCl2) in water to yield a 1.50 L solution?
Dilution • Preparing less concentrated solutions • Typically done by adding water to concentrated solution • Dilution formula: McVc = MdVd • C = concentrated • D = diluted
Dilution Examples • What volume in mL of a 1.20 M HCl solution must be diluted in order to prepare 1.00 L of 0.0150 M HCl? • How much water was added?
Number of Ions in Solution • Recall: Soluble Ionic Compounds dissociate completely (all ionize) • If you have 0.500 M of KMnO4, then there is 0.500 M of K+ and 0.500 M of MnO4- (1:1 ratio between ions) • [ ] are usually used to show concentration • [KMnO4] = 0.500 M, [K+] = 0.500 M, [MnO4-] = 0.500M
Number of Ions in Solution • If you have soluble ionic compounds with ratios other than 1:1 for ions, use subscripts to determine ion concentration • Ex: Na2SO4 • [Na2SO4] = 0.35 M, • [Na+] = 0.70 M, • [SO42-] = 0.35 M Suppose you had a 1.55 L solution of this ionic compound. How many moles of each ion do you have? How many individual ions do you have?
Gravimetric Analysis • Analytical technique based on mass • Uses percent composition • Ex: A 0.8633-g sample of an ionic compound containing chloride ions and unknown metal cations is dissolved in water and treated with excess AgNO3. If 1.5615 g of AgCl precipitate, what is the percent by mass of Cl in the original compound?
Acid-Base Titrations • Process where • Solution of known concentration (standard solution) is added gradually to • Another solution of unknownconcentrationtill • The reaction is complete • Equivalence point: # of moles of H+ ions equals # of moles of OH- ions • End point: Color change in solution (visually indicates the equivalence point)
Examples • What volume of a 0.203 M NaOH solution is needed to neutralize 25.0 mL of a 0.188 M H2SO4 solution? • If it takes 26.79 mL of 0.560 M HCl solution to neutralize 85.70 mL of Ba(OH)2, what is the molarity of the base?
One more example • What is the molar mass of a diprotic acid if 30.5 mL of 0.1112 M NaOH is required to neutralize a 0.1365-g sample?
Group Quiz #4 • How many milliliters of a 1.89 M H2SO4 solution are needed to neutralize 91.9 mL of a 0.336 M KOH solution? • Explain the difference between an endpoint and an equivalence point.