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Solutions

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Solutions. Solutions. _______________ mixtures Occur in each state of matter Gas mixed in gas (________) Gas mixed in liquid (___________________) Liquid mixed in liquid (_______________) Solid mixed in liquid (______________) Solid mixed in solid (_________________________) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Solutions
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Page 1: Solutions

Solutions

Page 2: Solutions

Solutions_______________ mixturesOccur in each state of matter

Gas mixed in gas (________)Gas mixed in liquid (___________________)Liquid mixed in liquid (_______________)Solid mixed in liquid (______________)Solid mixed in solid (_________________________)

Composed of a solute mixed with solventTerms used most commonly with ______

dissolved in _______In other types

Solute is substance in ___________ amount______ is the substance that was a different phase

than the resulting solution

Page 3: Solutions

Similar Mixtures___________

Homogenous appearanceMedium particle size

Particles will not settle Particles will disperse light

(tyndall effect)For example: Foam, fog,

milk____________

Heterogeneous appearance

Large particle sizeParticles will settle over time

For example: Italian salad dressing

Page 4: Solutions

Solubility

Ability of a substance to dissolve within another substance Depends on ___________ being usedUsually ______ dissolves ________We often mean the solubility in ___________

solutionsReally only in question for ___________ and

____________ solutionsReally a question of _______________

dissolves

Page 5: Solutions

Gas-Gas Solutions

Mix freely with each other

Each gas acts on its own

Page 6: Solutions

Gas-Liquid SolutionsSolubility ______________ with higher partial

pressures of the gas over a liquidSolubility _____________ with increasing

temperature

Page 7: Solutions

Liquid-Liquid SolutionsSome liquids are

______________Insoluble in each otherDue to polarity of liquids

(usually non-polar with polar)Miscible liquids

Usually like with likePolar with polarNon-polar with non-polar

Page 8: Solutions

Solid-Solid SolutionsAlloys

ALLOY COMPONENT METALSBronze copper, tinBrass copper, zincSteel iron, carbon, (various other

metals)Sterling Silver silver, nickel, copper14K Gold gold, copper, antimonyPewter tin, copper, antimonySolder tin, lead

Page 9: Solutions

Solid-Liquid Solution_________________

Compound broken into ions when dissolves

Solution can carry electrical current

_________________IMF’s (but not

molecules) are broken when dissolves

No electrical current can be carried

Page 10: Solutions

Dissolving NonelectrolytesNon-polar molecules

Soluble in non-polar solventsInsoluble in polar solvents

Polar molecules (or molecules with polar sections)Soluble in polar solventsInsoluble in non-polar

solventsDo not break apart

______ mole of solid solute creates _____ mole of particles in solution

Page 11: Solutions

Dissolving ElectrolytesIonization

Breaks a _______ bonded compound into ionsIons spread throughout solutions

______________Breaks ions in ionic bond apartIons spread throughout solution

Both processes create more particles in solution than were present in the solid solute

Page 12: Solutions

V’ant Hoff FactorRepresented by ____Equals the number of particles created from

each solute when dissolvedNonelectrolytes ________

C12H22O12 (s) C12H22O12 (aq) * _______________

Electrolytes ________________ from ionization or dissociationNaCl (s) Na+

(aq) + Cl-(aq) * _________________MgCl2 (s) Mg+2

(aq) + Cl-(aq) * _________________

Page 13: Solutions

SolvationProcess of ____________Also called hydration when solvent in

_________Bonds or IMF’s between particles must be

brokenEnergy is absorbed

Solvent particles surround the solute particles and form new bonds or IMF’s Energy is released

Page 14: Solutions

SaturationAn amount of solvent can only hold a certain amount of

soluteAmount depends on ______________Amount also depends on ________________

Usually ____________ temperature _____________ solubility

________________ solutionAmount of solute is below the amount that the solvent can

hold_________________ solution

Amount of solute is at the amount that the solvent can hold_______________ solution

Amount of solute is above the amount that the solvent can hold

Not common, made by carefully cooling a saturated solution

Page 15: Solutions

Solubility CurvesGraph depicting the solubility of substances

at different temperatures

Page 16: Solutions

Concentrations of SolutionsComparison of amount of solute in a solvent_______________

Dilute- small amount of solute compared to solvent

Concentrated- large amount of solute ____________

MolarityMolalityppm, ppb, pptMole fractionMass %

Page 17: Solutions

MolarityMole/Volume

EquationMolarity (M) = moles of solute / liters of

solution (not solvent)* Amount must be in _____________* Volume must be in _____________

Changes with temperature

Page 18: Solutions

MolalityMole/Mass

EquationMolality (m) = moles of solute / mass of

solvent* Amount must be in ____________* Mass must be in ____________

Does not change with temperature

Page 19: Solutions

ppm, ppb, and pptMass/VolumeUsed for very __________ solutions

ppm = parts per million one part solute in a million parts solutionRoughly equal to one person in a large city

ppb = parts per billion one part solute in a billion parts solutionRoughly equal to one person in India

ppt = parts per trillionOne part solute in a trillion parts solution

Not exact terms but we will useppm = 1 mg/Lppb = 1 g/Lppt = 1 ng/L

Page 20: Solutions

Mole FractionMol/Mol

EquationMole Fraction () = moles of component /

moles of all componentsNo unitsAll of the mole fractions of a solution add up to

________

Page 21: Solutions

Mass PercentMass/Mass

EquationMass Percent = (mass of solute/ mass of

solution) x 100

Page 22: Solutions

Colligative PropertiesProperties of solutions that depend on the

__________ of solute particles not the __________ of the solute

Shift in PointsFreezing point _____________- solution freezes

at a lower temperature than the pure solventBoiling point ___________- solution boils at a

higher temperaure than the pure solventVapor PressureOsmotic Pressure

Page 23: Solutions

Vapor PressureVapor pressure of solvent in solution is _______

than vapor pressure of pure solventEquation

Psolv = solv P°solv

Psolv = pressure of solvent vapor over solutionsolv = mole fraction of solvent in solutionP°solv = pressure of solvent vapor over pure solvent

Page 24: Solutions
Page 25: Solutions

Variables in Point Shiftsm- Molality of solutioni- V’ant Hoff factorConstants

Kf

Specific to solvent Shows the affect of solute on that solvent’s freezing

pointKf for water is 1.86 °C kg/mol

Kb

Specific to solvent Shows the affect of solute on that solvent’s boiling pointKb for water is 0.512 °C kg/mol

Page 26: Solutions

Freezing Point DepressionEquation

ΔTf = iKf m

Gives change in freezing pointMust subtract from pure solvent’s freezing

point to find solution’s freezing point

Page 27: Solutions

Boiling Point ElevationEquation

ΔTb = iKb m

Gives change in boiling pointMust add to pure solvent’s boiling point to

find solution’s boiling point

Page 28: Solutions

Osmotic PressurePressure that must be applied in order to

stop __________

Page 29: Solutions

OsmosisMovement of water from an area of

____________ concentration to an area of ______________ concentration

Occurs across semipermeable membranes (cell membranes)

Page 30: Solutions

Calculating Osmotic Pressure = iMRT

= osmotic pressure (will have pressure units)

i = V’ant Hoff factor M = Molarity of solutionR = gas constant (0.08206 atm L mol-1 K-1)T = temperature in K


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