Title: Molar Mass Determination by Freezing Point Depression
1Molar Mass Determination by Freezing Point
Depression
27 Molar Mass Determination by Freezing Point
Depression
- Goal
- To find the molar mass of an unknown solid
- Method
- Determine freezing point depression constant for
pure solvent (cyclohexane) - Use the freezing point depression of a solution
containing the solid to find the solutes molar
mass
3Colligative Properties
- Solution properties differ from those of pure
solvent - Proportional to molality (concentration) of
solute - Vapor pressure reduction
- Freezing point depression
- Boiling point elevation
- Osmotic pressure
- Osmotic pressure Key in BIO 20
4Phase Change Freezing/Melting
- Liquid cools at constant rate
Temperature
Liquid starts freezing
More more liquid freezes
FP
Time
5Actual Freezing
Temperature
Rounded T not uniform throughout
FP
Time
6Phase Change Temperature
- Freezing point pure liquid Melting pointpure
solid
?rates?l ?ratel?s
Pure liquid solvent (lo)
Pure solid solvent (so)
7Solute added
- Equilibrium at lower T so freezing point is LOWER
- Related to energy and disorder
?rates?l gt ?ratel?s
Solvent(l) solute
Pure solid solvent (so)
8Energy and Entropy Changes
Tf
Tfo
9Colligative Property
- Magnitude of freezing point depression
Depends on concentration of solute (not identity)
10Freezing point depression
- Kf molal freezing point constant
- specific to solvent
- Units C
- molal
- What is molal?
11Molality
- Concentration in molality, m
Independent of solution volume (V varies with T)
12Freezing point depression
Using
And
13Kf and Kb for some solvents
- Freezing point is lower
- Boiling point is higher
14Example
- 0.500 g of an unknown organic compound is
dissolved in 10.0 g benzene. The freezing point
lowers by 2.97C. - Calculate the molecular mass of the unknown..
-
- Kf, benzene 5.12 C/m
15Overview
- 1) From temp. vs. time plots, find freezing
points for - pure solvent (cyclohexane) and
- 0.05, 0.10, 0.15 m p-dichlorobenzene solutions
- 2) Using data from (1), plot DTf vs. molality to
find Kf - 3) Find DTf of a solution containing unknown
solid - 4) Use Kf from (2) and DTf from (3) to find
MMsolid
16Part 1 Determination of Cyclohexanes Kf
- Prepare samples
- Pure cyclohexane r20o 0.779 g/mL
- 0.05 m, 0.10 m, 0.15 m p-dichlorobenzene
- MM 147.00 g/mol
- DO NOT weigh out in advance
17Part 1 Determination of Cyclohexanes Kf
- Each sample
- Immerse in ice bath
- _at_ T13C
- record temp. and time T, t
- Plot T vs. t ? find Tf and DTf Tf, DTf
- Plot Tf vs. molality
- Find Kf from slope Kf
- Compare to lit. value (20.2oC/m)
18Examples Temperature vs. Time
You will have separate plots!
19Ideal DTf vs. molality
Slope Kf
20Example Data
- Experimental Kf
- 19.9oC/m
- error 1.5
- Theoretical Kf
- 20.2oC/m
21Part 2 MM Detemination if Unknown Solid
- Pure solvent
- Immerse in ice bath
- _at_ T13C, record temp. and time T, t
- With 0.37 g unknown
- Dissolve perform trial(s)
- _at_ T13C, record temp. and time T, t
- Find moles n and n
- MM of unknown solid MM
22Example Unknown Data
You will have separate plots!
23Example Unknown MM Data
24Report
- Abstract
- Results
- Sample calculations including
- Kf determination
- Molar Mass determination (ID)
- At least 6 graphs tables
- Temp. vs. time
- DTf vs. molality p-dichlorobenzenes and
unknown - Discussion/review questions
25Properties of cyclohexane
- Property Value
- Freezing point 6.50C
- Boiling point 80.72C
- Kf 20.2C/molal
- P at 25C 99.0 torr