Title: Chapter 8 Solutions
1Chapter 8 Solutions
2Solutions Solute and Solvent
- Solutions
- Are homogeneous mixtures of two or more
substances. - Consist of a solvent and one or more solutes.
3Nature of Solutes in Solutions
- Solutes
- Spread evenly throughout the solution.
- Cannot be separated by filtration.
- Can be separated by evaporation.
- Are not visible, but can give a color to the
solution.
4Examples of Solutions
- The solute and solvent in a solution can be a
solid, liquid, and/or a gas.
5Learning Check
- Identify the solute and the solvent in each.
- A. brass 20 g zinc 50 g copper
- solute 1) zinc 2) copper
- solvent 1) zinc 2) copper
- B. 100 g H2O 5 g KCl
- solute 1) KCl 2) H2O
- solvent 1) KCl 2) H2O
-
6Solution
- Identify the solute and the solvent in each.
- A. brass 20 g zinc 50 g copper
- solute 1) zinc
- solvent 2) copper
- B. 100 g H2O 5 g KCl
- solute 1) KCl
- solvent 2) H2O
-
7Water
- Water is the most common solvent.
- The water molecule is polar.
- Hydrogen bonds form between the hydrogen atom in
one molecule and the oxygen atom in a different
water molecule. -
8Water
9Like Dissolves Like
- A solution forms when there is an attraction
between the particles of the solute and solvent. - A polar solvent such as water dissolves polar
solutes such as sugar and ionic solutes such as
NaCl. - A nonpolar solvent such as hexane (C6H14)
dissolves nonpolar solutes such as oil or grease.
10Examples of Like Dissolves Like
- Solvents Solutes
- Water (polar) Ni(NO3)2
- (ionic)
- CH2Cl2 (nonpolar)
- I2 (nonpolar)
11Learning Check
- Which of the following solutes will dissolve in
water? Why? - 1) Na2SO4
- 2) gasoline (nonpolar)
- 3) I2
- 4) HCl
12Solution
- Which of the following solutes will dissolve in
water? Why? - 1) Na2SO4 Yes, ionic
- 2) gasoline No, nonnpolar
- 3) I2 No, nonpolar
- 4) HCl Yes, polar
- Most polar and ionic solutes dissolve in water
because water is a polar solvent.
13Formation of a Solution
- Na and Cl- ions on the surface of a NaCl crystal
are attracted to polar water molecules. - In solution, the ions are hydrated as several H2O
molecules surround each.
14Equations for Solution Formation
- When NaCl(s) dissolves in water, the reaction can
be written as - H2O
- NaCl(s) Na(aq) Cl- (aq)
- solid separation of
ions
15Learning Check
- Solid LiCl is added to water. It dissolves
because - A. The Li ions are attracted to the
- 1) oxygen atom (? -) of water.
- 2) hydrogen atom (?) of water.
- B. The Cl- ions are attracted to the
- 1) oxygen atom (? -) of water.
- 2) hydrogen atom (?) of water.
16Solution
- Solid LiCl is added to water. It dissolves
because - A. The Li ions are attracted to the
- 1) oxygen atom (? -) of water.
-
- B. The Cl- ions are attracted to the
- 2) hydrogen atom (? ) of water.
17Electrolytes
- Electrolytes
- Produce positive () and negative (-) ions when
they dissolve in water. - In water conduct an electric current.
18Strong Electrolytes
- Strong electrolytes ionize 100 in solution.
- Equations for the dissociation of strong
electrolytes show the formation of ions in
aqueous (aq) solutions. - H2O 100 ions
- NaCl(s) Na(aq) Cl-(aq)
H2O - CaBr2(s) Ca2(aq) 2Br- (aq)
19Learning Check
- Complete each of the following dissociation
equations for strong electrolytes dissolved in
water H2O - A. CaCl2 (s) 1) CaCl2
- 2) Ca2 Cl2-
- 3) Ca2 2Cl-
- H2O
- B. K3PO4 (s) 1) 3K PO43-
- 2) K3PO4
- 3) K3 P3- O4-
20Solution
- Complete each of the following dissociation
equations for strong electrolytes dissolved in
water - H2O
- A. 3) CaCl2 (s) Ca2 2Cl-
- H2O
- B. 1) K3PO4 (s) 3K PO43-
21Weak Electrolytes
- A weak electrolyte
- Dissolves mostly as molecules in solution.
- Produces only a few ions in aqueous solutions.
- Has an equilibrium that favors the reactants.
- HF H2O H3O(aq) F- (aq)
- NH3 H2O NH4(aq) OH- (aq)
22Nonelectrolytes
- Nonelectrolytes
- Form only molecules in water.
- Do not produce ions in water.
- Do not conduct an electric current.
-
-
23Equivalents
- An equivalent (Eq) is the amount of an ion that
provides 1 mole of electrical charge ( or -). -
24Electrolytes inBody Fluids
- In replacement solutions for body fluids, the
electrolyte amounts are given in milliequivalents
per liter (mEq/L).
25Examples of IV Solutions
- In intravenous solutions, the total mEq of
positively charged ions is equal to the total mEq
of negatively charged ions.
26Learning Check
- A. In 1 mole of Fe3, there are
- 1) 1 Eq 2) 2 Eq 3) 3 Eq
- B. 0.5 equivalents of calcium is
- 1) 5 mEq 2) 50 mEq 3) 500 mEq
- C. If the Na in a NaCl IV solution is 34 mEq/L,
- the Cl- is
- 1) 34 mEq/L 2) 0 mEq/L 3) 68 mEq/L
27Solution
- A. In 1 mole of Fe3, there are
- 3) 3 Eq
- B. 0.5 equivalents of calcium is
- 3) 500 mEq
- C. If the Na in a NaCl IV solution is 34
mEq/L, - the Cl- is
- 1) 34 mEq/L
28Solubility
- Solubility states the maximum amount of solute
that dissolves in a specific amount of solvent at
a particular temperature. - Typically, solubility is expressed as the grams
of solute that dissolves in 100 g of solvent,
usually water. - g of solute
- 100 g water
29Saturated Solutions
- A saturated solution
- Contains the maximum amount of solute that can
dissolve. - Has some undissolved solute at the bottom of the
container.
30Unsaturated Solutions
- An unsaturated solution
- Contains less than the maximum amount of solute.
- Can dissolve more solute.
31Learning Check
- At 40?C, the solubility of KBr is 80 g/100 g H2O.
- Identify the following solutions as either
- (1) saturated or (2) unsaturated. Explain.
- A. 60 g KBr added to 100 g of water at 40?C.
- B. 200 g KBr added to 200 g of water at 40?C.
- C. 25 g KBr added to 50 g of water at 40?C.
32Solution
- A. 2 Amount is less than the solubility.
- B. 1 In 100 g of water, 100 g KBr exceeds
the - solubility at 40?C.
- C. 2 This would be 50 g KBr in 100 g of
water, - which is less than the solubility at 40?C.
33Solubility of Solids Changes with Temperature
- The solubility of most solids increases with an
increase in temperature. -
-
34Solubility of Gases and Temperature
- The solubility of gases decreases with an
increase in temperature. -
35Learning Check
- A. Why could a bottle of carbonated drink
possibly burst (explode) when it is left out in
the hot sun? -
- B. Why do fish die in water that is too warm?
36Solution
- A. The pressure in a bottle increases as the gas
leaves solution as it becomes less soluble at
high temperatures. As pressure increases, the
bottle could burst. - B. Because O2 gas is less soluble in warm water,
fish cannot obtain the amount of O2 required for
their survival.
37Henrys Law
- According to Henrys Law, the solubility of a gas
in a liquid is directly related to the pressure
of that gas above the liquid.
38Next Time
- We will continue with Chapter 8
39Soluble and Insoluble Salts
- A soluble salt is an ionic compound that
dissolves in water. - An insoluble salt is an ionic compound that does
not dissolve in water.
40Solubility Rules
- A soluble salt dissolves in water.
- Insoluble salts do not dissolve in water.
41Using the Solubility Rules
- The solubility rules predict whether a salt is
soluble or insoluble in water.
42Learning Check
- Indicate if each salt is (1) soluble or (2)
insoluble. - A. ______ Na2SO4
- B. ______ MgCO3
- C. ______ PbCl2
- D. ______ MgCl2
43Solution
- Indicate if each salt is 1) soluble or 2)
insoluble. - A. 1 Na2SO4
- B. 2 MgCO3
- C. 2 PbCl2
- D. 1 MgCl2
44Formation of a Solid
- When solutions of salts are mixed, a solid forms
when ions of an insoluble salt combine.
45Learning Check
- The formula of an insoluble salt in each mixture
is - A. BaCl2 Na2SO4
- 1) BaSO4 2) NaCl 3) Na2Cl2 4) none
- B. AgNO3 KCl
- 1) KNO3 2) AgK 3) AgCl 4) none
- C. KNO3 NaCl
- 1) KCl 2) NaNO3 3) ClNO3 4) none
-
46Solution
- A. BaCl2 Na2SO4
- 1) BaSO4
- B. AgNO3 KCl
- 3) AgCl
- C. KNO3 NaCl
- 4) none all combinations are soluble.
-
47Percent Concentration
- The concentration of a solution is the amount of
solute dissolved in a specific amount of
solution. - amount of solute
- amount of solution
- The percent concentration describes the amount
of solute that is dissolved in 100 parts of
solution. - amount of solute
- 100 parts solution
48Mass Percent
- The mass percent (m/m)
- Concentration is the percent by mass of solute
in a solution. - mass percent g of solute x 100
g of solution - Is the g of solute in 100 g of solution.
- mass percent g of solute
100 g of solution
49Mass of Solution
- grams of solute grams of solvent
-
-
-
-
- 50.0 g KCl solution
50Calculating Mass Percent
- Mass percent (m/m) is calculated from the grams
of solute (g KCl) and the grams of solution (g
KCl solution). - g of KCl 8.0 g
- g of solvent (water) 42.0 g
- g of KCl solution 50.0 g
- 8.0 g KCl (solute) x 100 16 (m/m) KCl
- 50.0 g KCl solution
51Learning Check
- A solution is prepared by mixing 15 g Na2CO3
and 235 g of H2O. Calculate the mass percent
(m/m) of the solution. - 1) 15 (m/m) Na2CO3
- 2) 6.4 (m/m) Na2CO3
- 3) 6.0 (m/m) Na2CO3
52Solution
- 3) 6.0 (m/m) Na2CO3
- mass solute 15 g Na2CO3
- mass solution 15 g 235 g 250 g
- mass (m/m) 15 g Na2CO3 x 100
250 g solution - 6.0 Na2CO3 solution
53Mass/Volume Percent
- The mass/volume percent (m/v)
- Concentration is the ratio of the mass in grams
(g) of solute in a volume (mL) of solution. - mass/volume g of solute x 100
mL of solution - Is the g of solute in 100 mL of solution.
- mass/volume g of solute
100 mL
of solution
54Preparing a Solution with a Mass/Volume
Concentration
- A percent mass/volume solution is prepared by
weighing out the grams of solute (g) and adding
water to give the final volume of the solution.
55Calculation of Mass/Volume Percent
- Mass/volume percent (m/v) is calculated from
the grams of solute (g KCl) and the volume of
solution (mL KCl solution). - g of KI 5.0 g KI
- mL of KI solution 250.0 mL
- 5.0 g KI (solute) x 100 2.0(m/v)
KI - 250.0 mL KI solution
56Learning Check
- A 500. mL samples of an IV glucose solution
contains 25 g glucose (C6H12O6) in water. - What is the mass/volume (m/v) of glucose of
the IV solution?1) 5.0 2) 20. 3) 50. -
57Solution
- 1) 5.0
- Mass/volume (m/v)
- 25 g glucose x 100
- 500. mL solution
- 5.0 (m/v) glucose solution
58Volume Percent
- The volume percent (v/v)
- Concentration is the percent volume (mL) of
solute (liquid) to volume (mL) of solution. - volume (v/v) mL of solute x
100 mL of solution - Is the mL of solute in 100 mL of solution.
- volume (v/v) mL of solute
100 mL
of solution
59Percent Conversion Factors
- Two conversion factors can be written for any
type of value. -
60Learning Check
- Write two conversion factors for each
solutions - A. 8(m/v) NaOH
-
- B. 12(v/v) ethyl alcohol
61Solution
- A. 8(m/v) NaOH
- 8 g NaOH and 100 mL solution
- 100 mL solution 8 g NaOH
- B. 12(v/v) ethyl alcohol
- 12 mL alcohol and 100 mL solution
- 100 mL solution 12 mL alcohol
62Using Percent Factors
- How many grams of NaCl are needed to prepare
- 250 g of a 10.0 (m/m) NaCl solution?
- 1. Write the 10.0 (m/m) as conversion factors.
- 10.0 g NaCl and 100 g solution
- 100 g solution 10.0 g NaCl
- 2. Use the factor that cancels given (g
solution). - 250 g solution x 10.0 g NaCl 25 g
NaCl 100 g solution -
-
63Learning Check
- How many grams of NaOH are needed to
- prepare 2.0 L of a 12(m/v) NaOH solution?
- 1) 24 g NaOH
- 2) 240 g NaOH
- 3) 2400 g NaOH
64Solution
- 2) 240 g NaOH
- 2.0 L x 1000 mL 2000 mL
- 1 L
-
- 2000 mL x 12 g NaOH 240 g NaOH
- 100 mL
- 12 (m/v) factor
65Learning Check
- How many milliliters of 5 (m/v) glucose
solution are given if a patient receives 150 g of
glucose? - 1) 30 mL
- 2) 3000 mL
- 3) 7500 mL
66Solution
- 2) 3000 mL
- 150 g glucose x 100 mL 3000 mL
- 5 g glucose
- 5 m/v factor (inverted)
67Molarity (M)
- Molarity is a concentration unit for the moles of
solute in the liters (L) of solution. -
- Molarity (M) moles of solute moles
- liter of solution
L - Examples
- 2.0 M HCl 2.0 moles HCl
- 1 L
- 6.0 M HCl 6.0 moles HCl
- 1 L
68Preparing a 1.0 Molar Solution
- A 1.0 M NaCl solution is prepared by weighing out
58.5 g NaCl ( 1.0 mole) and adding water to make
1.0 liter of solution.
69Calculation of Molarity
- What is the molarity of a NaOH solution prepared
by adding 4.0 g of solid NaOH to water to make
0.50 L of solution ? - 1. Determine the moles of solute.
- 4.0 g NaOH x 1 mole NaOH 0.10 mole
- 40.0 g NaOH
- 2. Calculate molarity.
- 0.10 mole 0.20 mole 0.20 M NaOH
- 0.50 L 1 L
-
70Learning Check
- Calculate the molarity of an NaHCO3 solution
prepared by dissolving 36 g of solid NaHCO3 in
water to give a solution volume of 240 mL. - 1) 0.43 M
- 2) 1.8 M
- 3) 15 M
71Solution
- 2) 1.8 M
- 36 g x 1 mole NaHCO3 0.43 mole NaHCO3
- 84 g
- 0.43 mole NaHCO3 1.8 M NaHCO3
- 0.240 L
72Learning Check
- A glucose solution with a volume of 2.0 L
contains 72 g glucose (C6H12O6). If glucose has
a molar mass of 180. g/mole, what is the molarity
of the glucose solution? - 1) 0.20 M
- 2) 5.0 M
- 3) 36 M
73Solution
- 1) 0.20 M
- 72 g x 1 mole x 1 0.20
moles - 180. g 2.0 L 1 L
- 0.20 M
-
74Molarity Conversion Factors
- The units in molarity can be used to write
conversion factors.
75Learning Check
- Stomach acid is 0.10 M HCl solution. How
many moles of HCl are present in 1500 mL of
stomach acid? - 1) 15 moles HCl
- 2) 1.5 moles HCl
- 3) 0.15 mole HCl
-
76Solution
- 3) 0.15 mole HCl
- 1500 mL x 1 L 1.5 L
- 1000 mL
-
- 1.5 L x 0.10 mole HCl 0.15 mole HCl
- 1 L
- Molarity factor
77Learning Check
- Calculate the grams of KCl that must be
dissolved in water to prepare 0.25 L of a 2.0 M
KCl solution. - 1) 150 g KCl
- 2) 37 g KCl
- 3) 19 g KCl
-
78Solution
- 3) 37 g KCl
-
- Determine the number of moles of KCl.
- 0.25 L x 2.0 mole KCl 0.50 moles KCl
1 L - Convert the moles to grams of KCl.
- 0.50 moles KCl x 74.6 g KCl 37 g KCl
- 1 mole KCl
- molar mass of KCl
79Learning Check
- How many milliliters of 6.0 M HNO3 contain
- 0.15 mole of HNO3?
- 1) 25 mL
- 2) 90 mL
- 3) 400 mL
-
80Solution
-
- 1) 25 mL
- 0.15 mole HNO3 x 1 L x
1000 mL - 6.0 moles HNO3 1 L
- Molarity factor inverted
- 25 mL HNO3
81Next Time
- We complete Chapter 8
- Review for Exam 3
82Solutions
- Solutions are mixtures that
- Contain small solute particles (ions or
molecules). - Are transparent.
- Cannot be separated by filters.
83Colloids
- Colloidal dispersions are
- mixtures that
- Contain medium-sized particles called colloids.
- Cannot be separated by filters.
- Are separated by semipermeable membranes.
- Scatter light (Tyndall effect).
84Tyndall Effect
- A beam of light going through a colloid is
visible because the light is scattered by the
large solute particles. - The Tyndall effect does not occur with solutions.
85Examples of Colloids
86Suspensions
- Suspensions are mixtures that
- Contain very large particles that are visible.
- Settle out rapidly.
- Are separated by filters.
87Comparing the Properties of Solutions, Colloids,
and Suspensions
- (a) Suspensions settle.
- (b) Filters separate suspensions, but not
solutions or colloids. - (c) Only solution particles go through
semipermeable membranes.
88Comparing Solutions, Colloids, and Suspensions
89Learning Check
- A mixture with solute particles that do not
settle, but are too large to pass through a
semipermeable membrane is called a - 1) solution
- 2) colloid
- 3) suspension
90Solution
- A mixture with solute particles that do not
settle, but are too large to pass through a
semipermeable membrane is called a - 2) colloid
-
91Osmosis
- In osmosis,
- Water moves through a semipermeable membrane that
separates two solutions with different
concentrations. - Water flows out of the solution with the lower
solute concentration and into the solution with
the higher solute concentration. - The concentrations of the two solutions become
equal.
92Osmosis
- As water flows into the sucrose solution, the
volume of the sucrose solution increases. - The concentration of the sucrose solution
decreases.
93Osmosis
- During osmosis, water flows across the
semipermeable membrane from the 4 starch
solution into the 10 solution. - semipermeable
- membrane
-
-
-
-
4 starch
10 starch
H2O
94Equilibrium
- Eventually, the flow of water across the
semipermeable membrane becomes equal in both
directions. -
-
7 starch
7 starch
H2O