580 likes | 740 Views
Chapter 4: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY. Aqueous Solutions. Water is the dissolving medium, or solvent. Some Properties of Water Water is “ bent ” or V-shaped . The O-H bonds are covalent . Water is a polar molecule.
E N D
Chapter 4: TYPES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS AND SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY
Aqueous Solutions Water is the dissolving medium, or solvent.
Some Properties of Water Water is “bent” or V-shaped. The O-H bonds are covalent. Water is a polar molecule. Hydration occurs when salts dissolve in water.
Figure 4.1: (Left) The water molecule is polar. (Right) A space-filling model of the water molecule.
Figure 4.2: Polar water molecules interact with the positive and negative ions of a salt assisting in the dissolving process.
Figure 4.3: (a) The ethanol molecule contains a polar O—H bond similar to those in the water molecule. (b) The polar water molecule interacts strongly with the polar O—H bond in ethanol. This is a case of "like dissolving like."
A Solute dissolves in water (or other “solvent”); changes phase(if different from the solvent); is present in lesser amount (if the same phase as the solvent). A Solvent retains its phase(if different from the solute); is present in greater amount (if the same phase as the solute).
Electrolytes Strong Electrolytes - conduct current efficiently NaCl, HNO3 WeakElectrolytes - conduct only a small current vinegar, tap water Nonelectrolytes - no current flows pure water, sugar solution ※ Svante Arrhenius postulated: the extend to which a solution can conduct an electric current depends on the number of ions present.
Strong electrolytes: Substances that are completely ionized when they are dissolved in water . soluble salts, (2) strong acids, (3) strong bases.
Figure 4.5: When solid NaCl dissolves, the Na+ and Cl- ions are randomly dispersed in the water.
Arrhenius discoveries the nature of acids Figure 4.6: HCl(aq) is completely ionized.
※ Arrhenius proposed that an acid is a substance that produces H+. HCl H+(aq) + OH-(aq) HNO3H+(aq) + NO3-(aq) H2SO4H+(aq) + HSO4-(aq)
Strong bases - react completely with water to give OH- ions. Figure 4.7: An aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide.
Figure 4.8: Acetic acid (HC2H3O2) exists in water mostly as undissociated molecules. Only a small percentage of the molecules are ionized. Weak electrolytes:
Weak bases - react only slightly with water to give OH- ions. Figure 4.9: The reaction of NH3 in water.
Molarity Molarity (M) = moles of solute per volume of solution in liters:
Common Terms of Solution Concentration Standard solution- concentration is exactly known. Stock solutions- routinely used solutions prepared in concentrated form. Concentrated solution-relatively large ratio of solute to solvent. (5.0 M NaCl) Diluted solution - relatively small ratio of solute to solvent. (0.01 M NaCl)
Figure 4.10: Steps involved in the preparation of a standard aqueous solution.
Figure 4.11: (a) A measuring pipet is graduated and can be used to measure various volumes of liquid accurately. (b) a volumetric (transfer) pipet is designed to measure one volume accurately.
Figure 4.12: Dilution Procedure (a) A measuring pipet is used to transfer 28.7mL of 17.4 M acetic acid solution to a volumetric flask. (b) Water is added to the flask to the calibration mark. (c) The resulting solution is 1.00 M acetic acid.
資料處理 系統 毛細管 毛細管 I.D. 25-100 mm 偵測器 注入端 偵檢端 白金電極 電解質緩衝溶液 電解質緩衝溶液 高電壓(KV) 毛細管電泳(Capillary Electrophoresis-CE)儀器結構簡圖
+ + n - - EOF + n Net - 毛細管電泳的向量圖
CE-in-a-Chip Photograph of the micro-device with attached transfer capillary
m-TAS (micro-TAS) concept: Miniture -Total Chemical Analysis system.
Precipitation reactions AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) AgCl(s) + NaNO3(aq) Acid-base reactions NaOH(aq) + HCl(aq) NaCl(aq) + H2O(l) Oxidation-reduction reactions Fe2O3(s) + Al(s) Fe(l) + Al2O3(s) Types of Solution Reactions
Figure 4.13: When yellow aqueous potassium chromate is added to a colorless barium nitrate solution, yellow barium chromate precipitates.
Figure 4.14: Reactant Solutions: (a) Ba(NO3)2(aq) and (b) K2CrO4(aq)
Figure 4.15c: The reaction of K2CrO4 and Ba(NO3)2(aq). (cont'd)
Figure 4.16: Precipitation of silver chloride by mixing solutions of silver nitrate and potassium chloride. The K+ and NO3- ions remain in solution.
Figure 4.17: The reaction of KCl(aq) with AgNO3 to form AgCl(s).
1. Most nitrate (NO3) salts are soluble. 2. Most alkali (group 1A) salts and NH4+are soluble. 3. Most Cl, Br, and I salts are soluble(NOT Ag+, Pb2+, Hg22+) 4. Most sulfate salts are soluble(NOT BaSO4, PbSO4, HgSO4, CaSO4) 5. Most OH salts are only slightly soluble(NaOH, KOH are soluble, Ba(OH)2, Ca(OH)2 are marginally soluble) 6. Most S2, CO32, CrO42, PO43 salts are only slightly soluble. Table 4.1 Simple Rules for Solubility of Salts in Water
1. Molecular equation(reactants and products as compounds) AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) AgCl(s) + NaNO3(aq) 2. Complete ionic equation(all strong electrolytes shown as ions) Ag+(aq) + NO3(aq) + Na+(aq) + Cl(aq) AgCl(s) + Na+(aq) + NO3(aq) 3. Net ionic equation(show only components that actually react) Ag+(aq) + Cl(aq) AgCl(s) Na+ and NO3 are spectator ions. Describing Reactions in Solution
Titrant - solution of known concentration used in titration Analyte - substance being analyzed Equivalence point - enough titrant added to react exactly with the analyte (Stoichiometric point) Endpoint - the indicator changes color so you can tell the equivalence point has been reached. Indicator- a color substance with its color change to mark the endpoint of titration. Key Titration Terms
Figure 4.19: The reaction of solid sodium and gaseous chlorine to form solid sodium chloride.
Sum of oxidation states = 0 in compounds Sum of oxidation states = charge of the ion
Figure 4.20: A summary of an oxidation-reduction process, in which M is oxidized and X is reduced.
1. Write separate reduction, oxidation reactions. 2. For each half-reaction: Balance elements (except H, O) Balance O using H2O Balance H using H+ Balance charge using electrons 3. If necessary, multiply by integer to equalize electron count. 4. Add half-reactions. 5. Check that elements and charges are balanced. Balancing by Half-Reaction Method
Cr2O72-(aq) + SO3-(aq) Cr3+(aq) + SO42-(aq) How can we balance this equation? Balancing Oxidation-Reduction Reactions