Title: Chapter 14: Solutions
1Chapter 14 Solutions
- Many of the forces weve talked about occur
between ions/molecules in solutions - Definition A homogeneous mixture (only one
phase) - Examples saltwater, tap water, gemstones,
brass, air - Made up of a solvent and a solute Solvent the
substance present in the larger amount. - Solute the other substance
- Dissolving depends on attractive forces and
entropy
2Solutions
- There is a maximum amount of any solute that will
dissolve in a given solvent - If less than the maximum has been added, solution
is unsaturatedIf the max or more than the max
has been added, solution is saturated - The concentration of a solution is the amount of
solute that has been dissolved in a solvent. - Many units of concentrationmolarity (mol/L),
weight (g/g), ppm (mg/L)
3Solubility
- If a solute will dissolve in a solvent, it is
soluble. - Some solutes have limits,
- some are infinitely soluble in a
solvent. - Sugar 200 g in 100 mL water at 20
ÂșCEthanol infinitely soluble in waterGases
are infinitely soluble in one another
4Trends and Control of Solubility
General rules 1. polar solutes dissolve in
polar solvents 2. nonpolar solutes dissolve in
nonpolar solvents Like dissolves Like Oil
and water dont mix is oil polar or
nonpolar? You try which of these will dissolve
in water? CH3OH CH3CH3 NH3
5Trends and Control of Solubility
What controls Solubility Enthalpy (enthalpy
of solution) negative if new forces are
stronger than original forces Entropy more
complicated
6Forcing Solubility
- How do you make something dissolve if it is
normally insoluble in a solvent? - Grease and grime are made up of nonpolar
compounds. Will they dissolve in water? - They will dissolve in nonpolar solvents, like
turpentine, gasoline. Good for cleaning hands? - Soap the substance that makes nonpolar
compounds dissolve in water. How would you
design a soap molecule? What chemical properties
should it have?
7Soap and Detergent
- Soap is both polar and nonpolarAttracted to
water (polar) and grime (nonpolar)Soap is the
salt of a fatty acid, it is a surfactant molecule.
hydrophobic end hydrophilic end
8Soap
- Soap is both polar and nonpolarAttracted to
water (polar) and grime (nonpolar) - Made from fats, which contain 3 fatty acids and
glycerol
9Soap
- Nonpolar end is attracted to grimePolar end is
attracted to waterDirt is picked up off
clothes, skin, and rinsed away
See Soap movie
10Soap
- Hard water and soap
- Hard water contains high concentration ofCa2
and Mg2 ions - Ion-ion forces between Ca2, Mg2 and soap anion
results in soap scum (soap forms a solid compound
on your skin, bathtub, etc.) - Water softeners replace Ca2, Mg2 with Na
- How does dry-cleaning work? Previously used
CCl4, now less carcinogenic solvents
11Fabric Softener Cationic Surfactants
without
with
What effect will softener use have on
absorptivity?
without
with
12Introduction to Polymers
Polymers are long molecules made of repeating
units, called monomers.
In general
Specific example
13Forces between polymer chains Crosslinks
Weak Intermolecular force crosslinks
Strong Colvalent bond crosslinks
14Cotton
Cellulose polymer
Absorbs water. Cellulose chains
crosslinked by H-bonding.
15Wrinkling
16Permanent Press Cotton
Chemical crosslinking agent.