+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air,...

Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air,...

Date post: 13-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: samantha-glenn
View: 222 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
53
Solutions Solutions
Transcript
Page 1: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

SolutionsSolutions

Page 2: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Various Types of Solutions

ExampleState of Solution State of Solute

State of Solvent

Air, natural gas Gas Gas Gas

Vodka, antifreeze Liquid Liquid Liquid

Brass Solid Solid Solid

Carbonated water (soda) Liquid Gas Liquid

Seawater, sugar solution Liquid Solid Liquid

Hydrogen in platinum Solid Gas Solid

Page 3: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Solution Composition

AA

moles of soluteMolarity ( ) =

liters of solution

mass of soluteMass (weight) percent = 100%

mass of solution

molesMole fraction ( ) =

total moles of solution

moles of soluteMolality ( ) =

kilogram of s

M

molvent

Page 4: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Molarity

moles of soluteMolarity ( ) =

liters of solution M

Page 5: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

You have 1.00 mol of sugar in 125.0 mL of solution. Calculate the concentration in units of molarity.

Page 6: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

You have a 10.0 M sugar solution. What volume of this solution do you need to have 2.00 mol of sugar?

Page 7: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

7

Exercise

Consider separate solutions of NaOH and KCl made by dissolving 100.0 g of each solute in 250.0 mL of solution. Calculate the concentration of each solution in units of molarity.

Page 8: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Mass Percent

mass of soluteMass (weight) percent = 100%

mass of solution

Page 9: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

What is the percent-by-mass concentration of glucose in a solution made my dissolving 5.5 g of glucose in 78.2 g of water?

Page 10: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Mole Fraction

AA

molesMole fraction ( ) =

total moles of solution

Page 11: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

A solution of phosphoric acid was made by dissolving 8.00 g of H3PO4 in 100.0 mL of water. Calculate the mole fraction of H3PO4. (Assume water has a density of 1.00 g/mL.)

Page 12: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Molality

moles of soluteMolality ( ) =

kilogram of solvent m

Page 13: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

A solution of phosphoric acid was made by dissolving 8.00 g of H3PO4 in 100.0 mL of water. Calculate the molality of the solution. (Assume water has a density of 1.00 g/mL.)

Page 14: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Formation of a Liquid Solution

1. Separating the solute into its individual components (expanding the solute).

2. Overcoming intermolecular forces in the solvent to make room for the solute (expanding the solvent).

3. Allowing the solute and solvent to interact to form the solution.

Page 15: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Steps in the Dissolving Process

Page 16: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Steps in the Dissolving Process

• Steps 1 and 2 require energy, since forces must be overcome to expand the solute and solvent.

• Step 3 usually releases energy.• Steps 1 and 2 are endothermic, and step 3 is often

exothermic.

Page 17: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Enthalpy (Heat) of Solution

• Enthalpy change associated with the formation of the solution is the sum of the ΔH values for the steps:

ΔHsoln = ΔH1 + ΔH2 + ΔH3

• ΔHsoln may have a positive sign (energy absorbed) or a negative sign (energy released).

Page 18: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Enthalpy (Heat) of Solution

Page 19: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Concept Check

Explain why water and oil (a long chain hydrocarbon) do not mix. In your explanation, be sure to address how ΔH plays a role.

Page 20: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

The Energy Terms for Various Types of Solutes and Solvents

H1 H2 H3 Hsoln Outcome

Polar solute, polar solvent Large Large Large, negative

Small Solution forms

Nonpolar solute, polar solvent Small Large Small Large, positive No solution forms

Nonpolar solute, nonpolar solvent

Small Small Small Small Solution forms

Polar solute, nonpolar solvent Large Small Small Large, positive No solution forms

Page 21: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

In General

• One factor that favors a process is an increase in probability of the state when the solute and solvent are mixed.

• Processes that require large amounts of energy tend not to occur.

• Overall, remember that “like dissolves like”.

Page 22: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• Structural Effects: Polarity

• Pressure Effects: Henry’s law

• Temperature Effects: Affecting aqueous solutions

Page 23: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Pressure Effects

• Henry’s law: C = kP

C = concentration of dissolved gas

k = constant

P = partial pressure of gas solute above the solution

• Amount of gas dissolved in a solution is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas above the solution.

Page 24: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

A Gaseous Solute

Page 25: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Temperature Effects (for Aqueous Solutions)

• Although the solubility of most solids in water increases with temperature, the solubilities of some substances decrease with increasing temperature.

• Predicting temperature dependence of solubility is very difficult.

• Solubility of a gas in solvent typically decreases with increasing temperature.

Page 26: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

The Solubilities of Several Solids as a Function of Temperature

Page 27: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

The Solubilities of Several Gases in Water

Page 28: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

An Aqueous Solution and Pure Water in a Closed Environment

Page 29: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Vapor Pressures of Solutions

• Nonvolatile solute lowers the vapor pressure of a solvent.

• Raoult’s Law:

Psoln = observed vapor pressure of solution

solv = mole fraction of solvent

= vapor pressure of pure solvent

soln solv solv = P P

solvP

Page 30: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

A Solution Obeying Raoult’s Law

Page 31: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Nonideal Solutions

• Liquid-liquid solutions where both components are volatile.

• Modified Raoult’s Law:

• Nonideal solutions behave ideally as the mole fractions approach 0 and 1.

Total A A B B = + P P P

Page 32: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Vapor Pressure for a Solution of Two Volatile Liquids

Page 33: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

33

Summary of the Behavior of Various Types of Solutions

Interactive Forces Between Solute (A) and Solvent (B)

ParticlesHsoln

T for Solution

Formation

Deviation from

Raoult’s Law

Example

A A, B B A B Zero ZeroNone (ideal

solution)Benzene-toluene

A A, B B < A BNegative

(exothermic)Positive Negative

Acetone-water

A A, B B > A BPositive

(endothermic)Negative Positive

Ethanol-hexane

Page 34: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Concept Check

For each of the following solutions, would you expect it to be relatively ideal (with respect to Raoult’s Law), show a positive deviation, or show a negative deviation?

a) Hexane (C6H14) and chloroform (CHCl3)

b) Ethyl alcohol (C2H5OH) and water

c) Hexane (C6H14) and octane (C8H18)

Page 35: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• Depend only on the number, not on the identity, of the solute particles in an ideal solution: Boiling-point elevation Freezing-point depression Osmotic pressure

Colligative Properties

Page 36: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• Nonvolatile solute elevates the boiling point of the solvent.

• ΔT = Kbmsolute

ΔT = boiling-point elevation

Kb = molal boiling-point elevation constant

msolute= molality of solute

Boiling-Point Elevation

Page 37: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• When a solute is dissolved in a solvent, the freezing point of the solution is lower than that of the pure solvent.

• ΔT = Kfmsolute

ΔT = freezing-point depression

Kf = molal freezing-point depression constant

msolute= molality of solute

Freezing-Point Depression

Page 38: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Changes in Boiling Point and Freezing Point of Water

Page 39: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

A solution was prepared by dissolving 25.00 g glucose in 200.0 g water. The molar mass of glucose is 180.16 g/mol. What is the boiling point of the resulting solution (in °C)? Glucose is a molecular solid that is present as individual molecules in solution.

Page 40: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

You take 20.0 g of a sucrose (C12H22O11) and NaCl mixture and dissolve it in 1.0 L of water. The freezing point of this solution is found to be -0.426°C. Assuming ideal behavior, calculate the mass percent composition of the original mixture, and the mole fraction of sucrose in the original mixture.

Page 41: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

A plant cell has a natural concentration of 0.25 m. You immerse it in an aqueous solution with a freezing point of –0.246°C. Will the cell explode, shrivel, or do nothing?

Page 42: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• Osmosis – flow of solvent into the solution through a semipermeable membrane.

• = MRT

= osmotic pressure (atm)

M = molarity of the solution

R = gas law constant

T = temperature (Kelvin)

Page 43: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.
Page 44: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.
Page 45: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Exercise

When 33.4 mg of a compound is dissolved in 10.0 mL of water at 25°C, the solution has an osmotic pressure of 558 torr. Calculate the molar mass of this compound.

Page 46: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• The relationship between the moles of solute dissolved and the moles of particles in solution is usually expressed as:

van’t Hoff Factor, i

moles of particles in solution =

moles of solute dissolvedi

Page 47: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Ion Pairing

• At a given instant a small percentage of the sodium and chloride ions are paired and thus count as a single particle.

Page 48: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• The expected value for i can be determined for a salt by noting the number of ions per formula unit (assuming complete dissociation and that ion pairing does not occur). NaCl i = 2 KNO3 i = 2

Na3PO4 i = 4

Examples

Page 49: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• Ion pairing is most important in concentrated solutions.

• As the solution becomes more dilute, the ions are farther apart and less ion pairing occurs.

• Ion pairing occurs to some extent in all electrolyte solutions.

• Ion pairing is most important for highly charged ions.

Ion Pairing

Page 50: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Modified Equations

= T imK

= iMRT

Page 51: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• A suspension of tiny particles in some medium.

• Tyndall effect – scattering of light by particles.

• Suspended particles are single large molecules or aggregates of molecules or ions ranging in size from 1 to 1000 nm.

Page 52: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

Types of Colloids

Page 53: Solutions. Various Types of Solutions Example State of SolutionState of Solute State of Solvent Air, natural gasGas Vodka, antifreezeLiquid BrassSolid.

• Destruction of a colloid.• Usually accomplished either by heating or

by adding an electrolyte.

Coagulation


Recommended