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Solutions and Mixtures. Warm-Up. What is a mixture? What is a homogeneous mixture?. Focus Questions. What is a solution? What are the differences between unsaturated, saturated, and supersaturated solutions? What are some of the general properties of an acid?
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Warm-Up • What is a mixture? • What is a homogeneous mixture?
Focus Questions • What is a solution? • What are the differences between unsaturated, saturated, and supersaturated solutions? • What are some of the general properties of an acid? • What are some of the general properties of a base? • What is a neutralization reaction? • What is the pH scale? • How is pH used to describe the concentration of acids and bases?
Matter • Matter can be either a pure substance or a mixture of pure substances. • Pure Substance: • A pure substance is a material that is homogeneous and has constant properties throughout the sample. (Elements and compounds) • Examples: water, diamond, gold, table salt (sodium chloride), ethanol • Mixtures • There are two types of mixtures
Heterogeneous- a mixture that is not uniform in composition –the parts in the mixture can be separated from one another. • Types of heterogeneous mixtures: • Suspension- a mixture in which the particles settle out when the mixture is allowed to stand. • Examples pond water, fruit salad • colloid- a mixture consisting of tiny particles that are smaller than suspension but larger than solution particles. The particles will scatter light when it passes through. • Emulsion- a colloid in which the liquids do not mix are spread throughout one another. • Examples: mayonnaise, peanut butter
Homogeneous mixture-a mixture that is uniform in composition throughout – the parts cannot be separated from one another. Another name for a homogeneous mixture is a solution
Solutions • Solution: A type of homogeneous mixture formed when one substance dissolves in another. • There are two parts to a solution • Solute – the substance that is dissolved. • Solvent – the substance that causes the other to dissolve. (Water is usually the solvent.) • Example: Lemonade What part of the lemonade is the solute? lemon juice and sugar What part of the lemonade is the solvent? water
Solubility • Solubility: The maximum amount of a solute that can be dissolved in a given amount of solvent at a given temperature. • Soluble – anything that dissolves in another substance. • Ex: Salt is soluble in water. • Insoluble – anything that does not dissolve in another substance. • Ex: Oil is insoluble in water.
What affects solubility • 1. Temperature- • Increase temperature, increase solubility. • The molecules move faster at higher temperature causing more collisions therefore dissolving faster. • 2. Stirring • Stirring brings more solute into contact with solvent, therefore increasing solubility • 3. Crystal Size • Smaller crystals increase surface area. More solvent can come into contact with solute therefore increasing solubility.
Conductivity • Conductivity is the measure of a solution’s ability to conduct electricity. The conductivity gives important clues as to the type of solute dissolved. In aqueous(waterbased) solutions, dissolved ionic compounds yield solutions with high conductivity. • All of these solutions are considered strong electrolytes. • Solutions with low conductivity are called weak electrolytes. • Solutions made from covalent compounds have zero conductivity since they dissolve as molecules, not ions. These substances are known as nonelectrolytes.
Concentration • Not all solutions have all of the solute that can be dissolved. • A concentrated solution has a large amount of solute. • A dilute solution has a small amount of solute.
How much can dissolve? • If you continue adding sugar to lemonade, eventually the point is reached when no more sugar dissolves and the excess granules sink to the bottom of the glass.
Types of Solubility • Unsaturated – more solute can be dissolved in the solvent • Saturated – no more solute can be dissolved in the solventat the current temperature. Generally, as the temperature of a liquid solvent increases, the amount of solid solute that can dissolve in it also increases.
Types of Solubility • Supersaturated –contains more solute than a saturated solution at the same temperature. • Ex: Rock Candy is made in this way.
Types of Solubility Solubility Curve • Each line on the graph is called a solubility curve for a particular substance. • You can use a solubility curve to figure out how much solute will dissolve at any temperature given on the graph.
Warm-Up 1. A(n) __________ solution is any solution that can dissolve more solute at a given temperature. A. electrolyte B. saturated C. supersaturated D. unsaturated The answer is D. A saturated solution contains all the solute it can hold at that temperature, but an unsaturated solution can hold additional solute.
Warm-Up 2. What is a solubility curve used for? Answer: You can use a solubility curve to figure out how much solute will dissolve at any temperature given on the graph.
Warm-Up 3. The substance being dissolved in a solution is the __________. A. aqueous phase B. media C. solute D. solvent Answer is C. The solute dissolves into the solvent
Acids • An acid is defined by Arrhenius as a substance that dissociates to produce hydrogen ions (H+)in a water solution. HCl → H++ Cl-
Contains hydrogen Taste sour Reacts with metals to form hydrogen gas Reacts with carbonates to form carbon dioxide, water and a salt Corrode metals Electrolytes pH is less than 7 Turns blue litmus paper to red Properties of Acids Mg + 2HCl MgCl2 + H2 Na2CO3 + 2HCl CO2 + H2O + 2NaCl Conducts Electricity
ACIDS • HCl (hydrochloric acid) - gastric juice • H2SO4 (sulfuric acid) - fertilizer, car batteries • HC2H3O2 (acetic acid) - vinegar • HNO3 (nitric acid) - fertilizers • H3C6H5O7 (citric acid) – fruits Other common uses: dyes, paints, food preservation & preparation
Bases or Alkaline • A base is defined by Arrhenius as a substance that produces hydroxide ions OH- in a water solution. NaOH → Na+ + OH-
Contains OH- Taste bitter Electrolytes Feel soapy, slippery pH greater than 7 Turns red litmus paper to blue Reacts with fats/oils to produce soaps Properties of Bases Conducts Electricity
BASES • NaOH - lye, drain and oven cleaner • Mg(OH)2 - laxative, antacid, milk of magnesia • NaHCO3 – cooking, antacid • KOH – batteries, biodiesel, soaps • Ca(OH)2 – cement • Ba(OH)2 – waste water treatment • NH4OH – food processing
Warm-Up - Write the questions 1. The pH of an acidic solution is a. Less than 0. c. Less than 7. b. Greater than 14. d. Greater than 7. 2. A solution whose pH is 7 a. Is acidic. c. Is neutral. b. Is basic. d. Is none of the others. 3. Solubility is the _____ amount of a _____ that can be dissolved in a given amount of ______ at a given temperature. a. Least, solute, solvent b. Max, solute, solvent c. Least, solvent, solute d. Max, solvent, solute
Warm-Up In order for a solution to form, one substance must dissolve in another. the solvent must be water. a solid must dissolve in a liquid. a gas must dissolve in a liquid. A student dissolved equal amounts of salt in equal amounts of warm water, room-temperature water, and ice water. Which of the following is true? The salt dissolved most quickly in the warm water. The salt dissolved most quickly in the room-temperature water. The salt dissolved most quickly in the ice water. none of the above
pH Scale • pH • The pH scale is used to determine how acidic or basic a solution is. • measured with a pH meter or an indicator with a wide color range. (Litmus Paper) • Ranges from 0 to 14 • 7 is neutral
Neutralization Reaction Note: A salt is an ionic compound Reaction ofacidand abaseforms asalt and water– ALWAYS • NaOH + HCl NaCl + H2O Acid? Base? Salt? HCl NaOH NaCl
Neutralization Reaction • 2HNO3+ Ba(OH)2 H2O + Ba(NO3) Acid? Base? Salt? H3PO4 NaOH Na3PO4
Neutralization Reaction • 2LiOH + H2SO4 2H2O + Li2SO4 • 2HClO4 + Ca(OH)2 Ca(ClO4)2 + 2 H2O • KOH + HNO3 H2O + KNO3 • H3PO4 + NaOH H2O + Na3PO4
Solutions, Acids, & Bases Review
Review • The substance being dissolved is called _________. • The substance doing the dissolving is called __________. • A solution is a ______________ mixture. • A solution that can dissolve more. _________ • A solution that can dissolved no more. ___________ • A solution that has dissolved more than normal. ________________
Review • Substances that in solutions have H+ (hydrogen) ions are… • Acids produce what in water solution? • The acid in oranges. • The acids in fertilizers. • The acid in your stomach. • Solutions that have OH- ions are • Bases produce what in solution? (name)
Review • Base that is in batteries • Base in milk of magnesia • Bases have a ______feel and ________ taste. • Acids have a _______ taste. • Acids and bases are both corrosive and react with indicators to produce a _______ change. • Both produce ions in water and are therefore _____________.
Review • What measures how acidic or basic a substance is? • pH measures • 1 on the pH scale indicates a ________ acid 7 indicates a substance is________ and 14 indicates a _________ base. • A reaction of an acid and a base is what type of reaction? • What is formed when an acid and base are combined?
Warm-Up • What is nitric acid used for? • Hydrochloric Acid is your gastric juice in your stomach… what does it help your body do? • Arrhenius defines an acid as something that…..
Warm-Up • What is the difference between saturated, unsaturated, & supersaturated? • What can we do with a solubility curve? • If something is insoluble, what does that mean??
Warm-Up • What is the formula for hydrochloric acid? • If I produce a hydroxide ion, what am I? • I have a bitter taste. • What is the formula for magnesium hydroxide? And is it an acid or a base? • If I can hold more solute, I am called…
Warm-Up • What is the formula for sulfuric acid? • If I produce a hydrogen ion, what am I? • I have a sour taste. • What is the formula for lithium hydroxide? And is it an acid or a base? • If I have too much solute, I am called…