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IN THE NAME OF ALLAH THE MOST GRACIOUS, THE MOST MERCIFUL. CHEM 122. LEVEL-2 LECTURE # 1 CHAPTER 8 - SOLUTIONS. Chemistry by Timberlake p.226. Presented by: Department Of Chemistry. RCDP. Types of mixtures. 1- Solution 2- Colloidal solution/dispersion 3-Suspension . 1- True solution:.
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IN THE NAME OF ALLAH THE MOST GRACIOUS, THE MOST MERCIFUL CHEM 122. LEVEL-2 LECTURE # 1 CHAPTER 8 - SOLUTIONS Chemistry by Timberlake p.226 • Presented by: • Department Of • Chemistry RCDP
Types of mixtures 1- Solution 2- Colloidal solution/dispersion 3-Suspension
1- True solution: It is a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances. • One substance which is called the solute is uniformly dispersed in another substance called the solvent. • Every part of the solution possesses the same composition, density, viscosity. • Example: Sugar in water
Solvent: The component present in larger amount in solution. • Solute: The component present in smaller amount in solution (in lesser amount). • Solubility: Maximum amount of solute dissolved in a fixed quantity of solvent ( 100g) at a given temperature to form a saturated solution.
TYPES of SOLUTIONS:ThreeStates of matter : SOLID GAS LIQUID
Types of solutions (7): • A solution of gas in gas, example air (O2 gas in N2 gas) • A solution of gas in liquid, example aerated water such as soda water (CO2 in water) • A solution of gas in solid , example hydrogen in palladium (Pd) • A solution of liquid in liquid, example Benzene in toluene. • A solution of liquid in solid, example Amalgamated zinc (mercury in zinc) • A solution of solid in liquid, example seawater (NaCl in water). • A solution of solid in solid, Alloys, example Cu in Au (gold) and brass (zinc in copper).
Type of solutionExampleComponents of solution gas/gasairO2 gas and N2 gas gas/liquid sodaCO2 gas in water solid/liquidseawaterNaCl in water solid/solid brasszinc and copper
Properties of solution : It is a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances, where the solute, 1-May spread evenly throughout the solution. 2-Cannot be separated by filtration. 3-Can be separated by evaporation. 4-Is not visible, solution appears transparent 5-May give a color to the solution.
Q1:Identify the element (1), compound (2) or solution (3) : • water • sugar • salt water • air • tea
Q2-Identify the solute in each of the following solutions: a) 2 g sugar + 100 mL water b) 60.0 mL ethyl alcohol + 30.0 mL of methyl alcohol c) 55.0 mL water + 1.50 g NaCl d) Air: 200 mL O2 + 800 mL N2 e) brass: 20 g zinc + 50 g copper f) 100 g H2O+5 g KCl
Factors influencing solubility: 1-Temperature: (A) If the formation of solution is endothermicthen the solubility increases with the increase in temperature. heat + solute + solution (1) ⇌ solution (2) (B) If the formation of solution is exothermicthen solubility decreases with the increase in temperature. gas + solution (1) ⇌ solution (2) + heat Example :Solubility of gases are exothermic. Gases are less soluble at higher temperatures
2-Pressure : Solubility of gases increases with increasing pressure. Henry’s Law:The solubility of a gas in a liquid solution is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas above the solution.
3-Common ion effect: Solubility of AgCl decreases in the solution of NaCl compared to the solubility of AgCl in pure water. This is because of the chloride ion which is a common ion.
Types of solutions according to solute concentration: • Saturated solution: Solution contains maximum amount of solute at a given temperature and pressure • Unsaturated solution: Solution contains less than the maximum quantity of solute, or if the solution is not saturated. • Dilute solution: Quantity of solute is very less in solution.
Types of mixtures(cont.) 2- Colloidal solutions/ dispersions: -These are heterogeneous (non-uniform mixtures.) -In colloidal dispersion, the size of the solute molecules are intermediate between the size of solute molecules in true solution and those in suspension. Range of size 1 to 1000nm Example, Milk, Butter in H2O
Properties of Colloids • Have medium size particles, that do not settle out (separate). • Particles cannot be filtered (particles are small enough to be pass through filters). • Can be separated with semi permeable membranes (particles are too large to pass through semi permeable membranes). • Scatter light (Tyndall effect)
Examples of Colloids • Fog, clouds (liquid in gas) • Whipped cream (gas in liquid) • Homogenized Milk (liquid in liquid) • Cheese (liquid in solid) • Blood plasma (solid in liquid) • Pearls (solid in solid)
3- SUSPENSIONS: These are heterogeneous non-uniform mixtures. Properties of Suspensions • Have very large particles (can be seen by eye) • Settle out • Can be filtered • Must be stirred to stay suspended • N.B: It is important to “Shake well before using” before giving a suspension medication.
Examples of Suspensions • Blood platelets • Muddy water • Calamine lotion
(Homogeneous)(Heterogeneous) • Solution Colloid Suspension • - small particles - intermediate particles - large particles • < 1 nm bet. 1-1000 nm >1000 nm • - does not separate - does not separate - separates on standing • over time over time • - cannot be filtered - cannot be filtered - can be filtered • (can be separated with • semi permeable membranes) • - no Tyndall Effect -Tyndall Effect present -Tyndall Effect present • - e.g.: salt/H20 - e.g.: milk, gel, smoke, - e.g.: clay/water , • foam Italian salad dressing Comparison:
Polar and non polar solvents: • Some substances are soluble in one solvent but not in another solvent. • This is due to the polar and non polar nature of solvent. • Example: Sugar is soluble in water but not in petrol. • Alcohol and water are completely miscible in each other, this is due to the hydrogen bonding. • Two non polar substances are miscible (Hexane in Carbon tetrachloride).
Non-polar C6H14 will not dissolve in polar H2O. Non-polar C6H14 will dissolve in non-polar CCl4. Miscible: Fluids that completely dissolve in each other.
“ Like dissolves like ” • General rule for solutions is “like dissolves like.” Polar dissolves polar & non-polar dissolves non-polar. Examples: • I2 is soluble in CCl4 & relatively insoluble in water • NaCl is soluble in water but not in non polar solvents. • Polar molecule like CH3OH will dissolve as a molecule in polar H2O. • Ionic LiF will dissolve as ions in polar H2O.
Solvation and hydration: • Polar solutes dissolve in polar solvents. • Ionic substances furnish cations (+) and anions ( - ). • These ions are surrounded by solvent molecules this is known as solvation and if the solvent is water then it is called hydration. Example NaCl in water.
H2O Hydration Na+ Cl- Na+ Dissolved solute Cl- H2O Na+ Cl- solute
When NaCl(s) dissolves in water, the reaction can be written as NaCl(s) H2ONa+ (aq)+Cl(aq) solid separation of ions in water
Q1:Solid LiCl is added to some water. It dissolves because A. The Li+ ions are attracted to the 1) oxygen atom(-) of water 2) hydrogen atom(+) of water B. The Cl- ions are attracted to the 1) oxygen atom(-) of water 2) hydrogen atom(+) of water
Answer: Solid LiCl is added to some water. It dissolves because A. The Li+ ions are attracted to the 1) oxygen atom(-) of water B. The Cl- ions are attracted to the 2) hydrogen atom(+) of water
Q2:Like dissolves like A ____________ solvent such as water is needed to dissolve polar solutes such as sugar and ionic solutes such as NaCl. A ___________solvent such as hexane (C6H14) is needed to dissolve nonpolar solutes such as oil or grease.
Q3:Which of the following solutes will dissolve in water? Why? 1) Na2SO4 2) gasoline 3) I2 4) HCl
Answer: 1) Na2SO4 Yes, polar (ionic) 2) gasoline No, nonnpolar 3) I2 No, nonpolar 4) HCl Yes, Polar
Spectator ion: Two ionic compounds NaCl and AgNO3 in water exist as Na+, Cl- and Ag+, (NO3)- ,ionsand react with each other Ag+aq + NO3 aq + Na+aq + Cl-aq → AgCl s↓ + Na+aq+ NO3 aq This equation is called ionic equation. In this reaction Na+ and NO3 ions do not change during a reaction are called spectator ions. They are the same before and after the reaction.
Ag+aq + NO3 aq + Na+aq + Cl-aq → AgCl s↓ + Na+aq+ NO3 aq while writing an ionic equation we can omit the spectator ions. This equation is known as net ionic equation Ag+aq + NO3 aq + Na+aq + Cl-aq → AgCl s↓ + Na+aq+ NO3 aq Ag+aq + Cl-aq → AgCl↓ ( net ionic equation )
Another example: AgF aq + KCl aq → AgCl s +KF aq–molecular equation Ag+aq + F-aq + K+aq + Cl-aq → AgCl ↓ + K+ + F----ionic equation Ag+aq + Cl-aq → AgCl ↓---net ionic equation
PCDPR-CHEM.122 LEVEL 2MCQz Q1. Indicate solution among the following: A). Water b) salt-water c) air d) both b & c Q2. Brass is an alloy of 20 g zinc + 50g copper. Identify the solute: A). 20 g zinc b) 50g copper c) both a & b d) none of the above Q3. Identify solvent in 55ml water & 2g NaCl A). 55ml water b) 2g NaCl c) both a & b d) none of the above
Q4.Solubility of gases increases with rise in: A). Pressure b) temperature c) both a &b d) none of the above Q5. The process in which water is taken as solvent is called: A). solvation b) hydration c) evaporation d) condensation
Q6. Iodine I2 is soluble in CCl4: A) True b) False Q7.Polar or ionic solutes are dissolved in: A). Polar solvents b) non Polar solvents c) Polar solutes d) non Polar solutes Q8. Which solute will dissolve in water? A) Na2SO4 b) gasoline c) I2 d) Hexane