87
TOPICS TO BE COVERED 1.WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS? 2.SOLVENTS AND SOLUTES 3.SOLUBILITY AND ITS FACTORS 4.CONCENTRATIONS 5.SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY 6.COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

Topics to be covered

  • Upload
    jaunie

  • View
    40

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Topics to be covered. What are solutions? Solvents and solutes Solubility and its Factors Concentrations Solution Stoichiometry Colligative Properties. Solutions. Chemicals + Water. 1. What are solutions. Objective : what are they?. Solutions. Importance of studying solutions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Topics to be covered

TOPICS TO BE COVERED1.WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?2.SOLVENTS AND SOLUTES3.SOLUBILITY AND ITS FACTORS4.CONCENTRATIONS5.SOLUTION STOICHIOMETRY6.COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

Page 2: Topics to be covered

SOLUTIONSCHEMICALS + WATER

Page 3: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONSOBJECTIVE: WHAT ARE THEY?

Page 4: Topics to be covered

SOLUTIONS• IMPORTANCE OF STUDYING SOLUTIONS

• BECAUSE MANY REACTIONS TAKE PLACE IN SOLUTIONS

• BECAUSE MIXING REACTANTS IN SOLID FORM OFTEN DO NOT RESULT IN REACTIONS.

• REACTIONS REQUIRE COLLISIONS AT THE ATOMIC/MOLECULAR LEVEL, AND IN THE SOLID STATE, THIS DOES NOT OCCUR AT A SIGNIFICANT RATE.

Page 5: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?SOLUTIONS ARE…

HOMOGENOUS MIXTURES

• HOMOGENOUS VS. HETEROGENEOUS• MIXTURE VS. COMPOUND

Page 6: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?

HOMOGENEOUS

EVEN DISTRIBUTION

HETEROGENEOUS

UNEVEN DISTRIBUTION

Page 7: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?

MIXTURES

PHYSICALLY MIXED

COMPOUND

CHEMICALLY JOINED

Page 8: Topics to be covered

SOLUTIONS

Page 9: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?

MIXTURES

CAN BE SEPARATED

COMPOUND

CANNOTBE SEPARATED

Page 10: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?

MIXTURES

CAN BE SEPARATED

COMPOUND

CANNOTBE SEPARATED

Page 11: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?SOLUTIONS ARE…

HOMOGENOUS MIXTURES

SOLUTIONS = TWO OR MORE THINGS EVENLY MIXED TOGETHERSOLUTIONS = THINGS MIXED INTO WATER

Page 12: Topics to be covered

1. WHAT ARE SOLUTIONS?HETEROGENEOUS MIXTURES:

SUSPENSIONS & COLLOIDS

Suspensions

Separates and Settles Colloids do not

Jello or Milk

Page 13: Topics to be covered

2. SOLUTES AND SOLVENTSOBJECTIVE: CLASSIFYING INGREDIENTS IN

SOLUTIONS

Page 14: Topics to be covered

2. SOLVENT AND SOLUTEAll solutions have at least TWO ingredients

Ingredients can be classified as either a

SOLVENTSOLUTE

Page 15: Topics to be covered

2. SOLVENT AND SOLUTE

SOLVENT- PRESENT IN GREATER AMOUNT

- DOES THE “DISSOLVING”

WATER IS THE UNIVERSAL SOLVENT

SOLUTE- PRESENT IN LESSER AMOUNT

- IS THE ONE “DISSOLVED”

Page 16: Topics to be covered
Page 17: Topics to be covered

2. SOLVENT AND SOLUTE

Does not always involve liquids

Page 18: Topics to be covered
Page 19: Topics to be covered
Page 20: Topics to be covered

2. SOLVENT AND SOLUTECAN THERE BE MORE THAN ONE SOLUTE IN A

SOLUTION?

CAN THERE BE MORE THAN ONE SOLVENT IN A SOLUTION?

IF A SOLUTION IS A MIXTURE, DO THE SOLUTES AND THE SOLVENTS CHEMICALLY REACT OR PHYSICALLY MIX?

Page 21: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITYOBJECTIVE: IF SOMETHING DOES OR DOES NOT

DISSOLVE

Page 22: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

Why do some things dissolve while others do not?

What does it mean for something to “dissolve?”

Page 23: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITYWhy do some things dissolve

while others do not?

“Like dissolves Like”

Page 24: Topics to be covered
Page 25: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

“Like dissolves Like”Polar Solvent will dissolve…

Non-Polar Solvent will dissolve

Page 26: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

Miscible vs. ImmiscibleMiscible = dissolves

Immiscible = does NOT dissolve

Page 27: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

What does it mean for something to “dissolve?”

It means to “dissociate”

Page 28: Topics to be covered

Dissociation

Separating

dipoles

Page 29: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITYNow we know why some

things dissolve and others do not.

We also know what it means for something to dissolve.

Page 30: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITYHow much of some thing can

be dissolved?

SolubilityTHE MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF A SOLUTE THAT CAN DISSOLVE

AT A SPECIFIED TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE

Page 31: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

Increasing/Decreasing Solubility

1. Temperature2. Pressure

Page 32: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

WHAT IS THE

TREND?

Page 33: Topics to be covered

SO AS TEMPERATUR

E _______, SOLUBILITY

______

Page 34: Topics to be covered
Page 35: Topics to be covered
Page 36: Topics to be covered
Page 37: Topics to be covered
Page 38: Topics to be covered
Page 39: Topics to be covered
Page 40: Topics to be covered
Page 41: Topics to be covered

3. SOLUBILITY

Increasing Solubility with Temperature

Page 42: Topics to be covered

Unsaturated Solutions

more solute can be

dissolved

no heat necessary

Page 43: Topics to be covered

Saturated Solutions

no more solute can be

dissolvedno heat necessary

Page 44: Topics to be covered

Super-Saturated Solutions

more solute than normal

heat necessary

Page 45: Topics to be covered

Super-Saturated Solutions

Rock Candy

Page 46: Topics to be covered
Page 47: Topics to be covered

GAS SOLUTEAS TEMPERATURE _____ THE SOLUBILITY OF GAS _______.

SO TEMPERATURE AND SOLUBILITY OF A GAS HAVE

A(N) ____.

RECALLING HEAT AS KINETIC ENERGY, WE CAN EXPLAIN

THIS BY…

Page 48: Topics to be covered

SOLUBILITY OF SOLIDS

SOLUBILITY OF GASES

Page 49: Topics to be covered

1. EXPLAIN WHY THERE MIGHT BE MORE MINERAL FORMATION SURROUNDING THERMAL SPRINGS THAN COOL MOUNTAIN SPRINGS.

2. WHY DOES WARM SODA FLAT FASTER THAN COLD SODA?

3. ON SAME SHEET, ANSWER QUESTIONS #67-72 ON PG 491.

4. TURN IN

Page 50: Topics to be covered

4. CONCENTRATIONSOBJECTIVE: MEASURING SOLUBILITY

Page 51: Topics to be covered

4. CONCENTRATION

Concentration = how much solute in the

solution2 methods

Page 52: Topics to be covered

4. CONCENTRATIONMolarity MOLALITY

Symbol MFormula

M = mol L

Units mol = mol of SOLUTE

L = liters of solution

Example

5 M, or 5 molar

Page 53: Topics to be covered

BA(NO3)2(AQ) + NA2SO4(AQ) BA(SO4)(S) + 2NANO3(AQ)

• 25ML OF 0.5M BA(NO3)2 SOLUTION IS COMBINED WITH EXCESS NA2SO4. HOW MANY GRAMS OF PRECIPITATE ARE FORMED?

Page 54: Topics to be covered

CACL2(AQ) + 2NH4OH(AQ) CA(OH)2(S) + 2NH4CL(AQ)

• HOW MANY ML OF A 0.2M NH4OH SOLUTION WOULD BE REQUIRED TO PRECIPITATE ALL OF THE CA2+ IONS IN 50ML OF A 0.15M CACL2 SOLUTION?

Page 55: Topics to be covered

PB(NO3)2(AQ) + 2NACL(AQ) PBCL2(S) + 2NANO3(AQ)

• HOW MANY GRAMS OF PRECIPITATE WOULD FORM IF 30ML OF A 0.25M PB(NO3)2 SOLUTION WAS ADDED TO 20ML OF A 0.50M NACL SOLUTION?

• HOW MANY MOLES OF THE EXCESS REACTANT ARE LEFT OVER AFTER THE REACTION?

• WHAT IS THE MOLARITY OF THE EXCESS REACTANT AFTER THE REACTION?

Page 56: Topics to be covered
Page 57: Topics to be covered
Page 58: Topics to be covered
Page 59: Topics to be covered

CAN A SOLUTION WITH UNDISSOLVED SOLUTE BE

SUPERSATURATED?

Page 60: Topics to be covered

• SOLUBILITY OF GASES

• HENRY’S LAW• A GAS HAS A SOLUBILITY OF 3.6G/L AT A PRESSURE OF 100KPA. WHAT PRESSURE IS NEEDED TO PRODUCE AN AQUEOUS SOLUTION CONTAINING 9.5G/L OF THE SAME GAS?

• THE SOLUBILITY OF METHANE IN WATER AT 100KPA IS 0.026G/L, WHAT WILL THE SOLUBILITY BE AT A PRESSURE OF 180KPA?

Page 61: Topics to be covered

• SOLUBILITY OF LIQUIDS

• LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE• MISCIBLE – DESCRIBES TWO OR MORE

LIQUIDS THAT ARE ABLE TO DISSOLVE INTO EACH OTHER

• IMMISCIBLE – DESCRIBES TWO OR MORE LIQUIDS THAT DO NOT MIX WITH EACH OTHER

Page 62: Topics to be covered

• SOLUBILITY OF LIQUIDS

• LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE• MISCIBLE

• NON-POLAR AND NON-POLAR = MISCIBLE

• POLAR + POLAR = MISCIBLE

• IMMISCIBLE • NON-POLAR + POLAR = IMMISCIBLE

Page 63: Topics to be covered

• MAKING SOLUTIONS

• HOW WOULD YOU PREPARE A 100ML OF 0.40M MGSO4 FROM A STOCK SOLUTION OF 2.0M MGSO4?

• YOU NEED 250ML OF 0.20M NACL. WHAT VOLUME WOULD YOU NEED FROM A STOCK 1.0M NACL SOLUTION?

Page 64: Topics to be covered

• MAKING SOLUTIONS

• AN EXPERIMENT REQUIRES 1L OF 1.0M KOH. YOU HAVE 1L OF 0.5M KOH. CAN YOU PREPARE THE REQUIRED SOLUTION BY DILUTING WHAT YOU HAVE?

Page 65: Topics to be covered

• PERCENT SOLUTIONS

• SIMILAR TO PPM

Page 66: Topics to be covered

• PERCENT SOLUTIONS

• WHAT IS THE PERCENT BY VOLUME OF ETHANOL (C2H6O) WHEN 75ML OF ETHANOL IS DILUTED TO A VOLUME OF 250ML WITH WATER?

• A SOLUTION CONTAINS 2.7G OF CUSO4 IN 75ML OF SOLUTION. WHAT IS THE PERCENT BY MASS OF THE SOLUTION?

Page 67: Topics to be covered

• CONCENTRATION OF IONS

• CALCULATE THE NUMBER OF MOLES OF CL- IN 2.75 L OF 1.0X10-3M ZNCL2

• HOW MANY GRAMS OF SULFATE ION ARE PRESENT IN 500ML OF A 2M AL2(SO4)3 SOLUTION?

Page 68: Topics to be covered

• COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

• THE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF A SOLUTION ARE DIFFERENT FROM THOSE OF A PURE SOLVENT.

• SOME OF THESE DIFFERENCES ARE DUE TO THE PRESENCE OF SOLUTE PARTICLES IN THE SOLUTION.

Page 69: Topics to be covered

• COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

• COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES – A PROPERTY OF A SOLUTION THAT DEPENDS ON THE CONCENTRATION OF THE SOLUTE PARTICLES.

• THE WORD COLLIGATIVE IS DERIVED FROM THE LATIN COLLIGATUS MEANING BOUND TOGETHER, SINCE THESE PROPERTIES ARE BOUND TOGETHER BY THE FACT THAT THEY ALL DEPEND ON THE NUMBER OF SOLUTE PARTICLES.

Page 70: Topics to be covered

• COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

• BOILING POINT ELEVATION – THE DIFFERENCE IN TEMPERATURE BETWEEN THE BOILING POINTS OF A SOLUTION AND OF THE PURE SOLVENT.

• FREEZING POINT DEPRESSION – IS THE DIFFERENCE IN TEMPERATURE BETWEEN THE FREEZING POINTS OF A SOLUTION AND OF THE PURE SOLVENT.

Page 71: Topics to be covered

• COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

• THE MAGNITUDE OF BP ELEVATION AND FP DEPRESSIONS IS PROPORTIONAL TO THE NUMBER OF SOLUTE PARTICLES DISSOLVED IN THE SOLVENT.

Page 72: Topics to be covered

• COLLIGATIVE PROPERTIES

• WOULD A DILUTE OR CONCENTRATED SODIUM FLUORIDE SOLUTION HAVE A HIGHER BOILING POINT?

• IF EQUAL NUMBER OF MOLES OF KI AND MGF2 ARE DISSOLVED IN EQUAL AMOUNTS OF WATER, WHICH SOLUTION WOULD HAVE THE HIGHEST:

• BOILING POINT• FREEZING POINT

Page 73: Topics to be covered

MOLARITY MOLALITY

• VOLUME OF SOLUTE + • VOLUME OF SOLVENT

• UNIT = M

BOTH MOLARITY AND MOLALITY MEASURE CONCENTRATION

• MASS OF SOLVENT IN KILOGRAMS

• UNIT = M (ITALICIZED)

Page 74: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING MOLALITY

• CALCULATE THE MOLALITY AND TOTAL MOLALITY (IF APPLICABLE) OF A SOLUTION PREPARED BY DISSOLIVING 10.0G OF NACL IN 600 G OF WATER.

• CALCULATE THE MOLALITY AND TOTAL MOLALITY (IF APPLICABLE) OF A SOLUTION PREPARED BY DISSOLIVING 10.0G C12H22O11 OF IN 600 G OF WATER.

Page 75: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING MOLALITY

• HOW MANY GRAMS OF POTASSIUM IODIDE MUST BE DISSOLVED IN 500G OF WATER TO PRODUCE A 0.060 MOLAL KI SOLUTION?

Page 76: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING MOLALITY

• WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A 1M AND A 1M SOLUTION?

• A 4 G SUGAR CUBE (C12H22O11) IS DISSOLVED IN A 350 ML TEACUP OF 80 °C WATER. WHAT IS THE MOLALITY OF THE SUGAR SOLUTION IF THE DENSITY OF WATER AT 80° = 0.975 G/ML

Page 77: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING BP AND FP CHANGES

• BP

•ΔTB = KB * M

• FP

•ΔTF = KF * M

Page 78: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING BP AND FP CHANGES

• KB, KF = THE MOLAL BP/FP CONSTANT, WHICH IS EQUAL TO THE CHANGE IN BP/FP TEMPERATURE FOR A 1 MOLAL SOLUTION.

Page 79: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING BP AND FP CHANGES

• WHAT IS THE BOILING POINT OF A 1.5 MOL SOLUTION THAT IN 800G OF WATER?

Page 80: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING BP AND FP CHANGES

• WHAT IS THE BOILING POINT OF A 1.2 MOL SOLUTION OF NACL IN 800G OF WATER?

Page 81: Topics to be covered

• CALCULATING BP AND FP CHANGES• WHAT IS THE BP AND FP OF A 1.40 MOL

SOLUTION OF NA2SO4 IN 1750G OF WATER?

Page 82: Topics to be covered

• DETERMINING MOLAR MASS FROM ΔTB

AND ΔTF

• MOLAR MASS =

• 7.5 G OF SOLUTE IS ADDED TO 22.60 G OF WATER. THE WATER BOILS AT 100.78 DEGREES C. WHAT IS THE MOLAR MASS OF THE SOLUTE?

Page 83: Topics to be covered

• DETERMINING MOLAR MASS FROM ΔTB AND ΔTF

• WHAT INFORMATION/MEASUREMENTS ARE NEEDED TO FIND THE MOLAR MASS OF A SOLUTE WHEN GIVEN THE BOILING POINT ELEVATION, ΔTB, FOR AN AQUEOUS SOLUTION?

Page 84: Topics to be covered
Page 85: Topics to be covered
Page 86: Topics to be covered
Page 87: Topics to be covered