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Solutions. Solution Process. “Surround and Separate” Particles of the solvent pull particles of solute into solution. Dissociation Another Look. Terminology. Solute – smaller amount that gets dissolved Solvent- larger amount that dissolves the solute Soluble-able to dissolve miscible
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Solution Process • “Surround and Separate” • Particles of the solvent pull particles of solute into solution
Dissociation • Another Look
Terminology • Solute – smaller amount that gets dissolved • Solvent- larger amount that dissolves the solute • Soluble-able to dissolve • miscible • Insoluble- unable to dissolve • immiscible • Precipitate-insoluble product of a double displacement reactions
Speeding Up Solutions • Agitation • Stirring makes particles collide more often • Surface Area • Grinding up a solute makes it easier to “surround and separate” them into solution • Temperature • Heating a solution speeds up the particles, increasing the number of collisions • NOTE: When dissolving a gas in a liquid, a colder liquid slows down the gas particles and dissolves more total gas
Which method of speeding up a solution explains why a powdered aspirin works faster than a tablet? • Agitation • Surface Area • Temperature
Which method of speeding up a solution explains why sugar dissolves better in fresh tea than iced tea? • Agitation • Surface Area • Temperature
Which method of speeding up a solution explains why Kool-Aid powder has to be stirred into water? • Agitation • Surface Area • Temperature
Which method of speeding up a solution explains why you can’t make “Cold Chocolate”out of “Hot Chocolate” powder? • Agitation • Surface Area • Temperature
Which method of speeding up a solution explains why soup mix dissolves faster than bouillon cubes? • Agitation • Surface Area • Temperature
Solubility • Describes how well a substance will dissolve in 100g of water at a given temperature • Differs with each substance and temperature
Amounts of Solute • Unsaturated • Solution has not dissolved as much solute as it can hold • More solute can be dissolved • Any point below the saturation line • Saturated • Solution has dissolved as much solute as it can hold • No more solute can be dissolved • Any point on the saturation line • Supersaturated • Solution has dissolved more solute than it can hold • A point above the saturation line • Solute will come out of solution if disturbed until it reaches the Saturation Point
What is the solubility of NaNO3 at 10C? • 72 g • 80 g • 96 g • 105 g
How much NH4Cl would precipitate from a saturated solution that cools from 90C to 50C? • 70 g • 50 g • 20 g • 120 g
How much more KClO3 could be added to form a saturated solution that goes from 30C to 90C? • 50 g • 10 g • 40 g • 0 g
Solubility Curve Review saturated unsaturated