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Solutions Notes Words to Know • Solution – homogenous mixture • Solvent – substance present in the largest amount • Solutes – substance present in the smallest amount • Aqueous solution – solutions with water as the solvent • Concentration – the amount of solute in a given volume of solution • Concentrated – large amount of solute dissolved in solvent • Dilute – small amount of solute dissolved in solvent • Saturated – a solution that contains as much solute as will dissolve at that temperature • Unsaturated – a solution that hasn’t reached that limit of solute that will dissolve • Supersaturated - a solution that contains more solute than should dissolve at that temperature Effect of Temperature on Solubility • Increasing the temperature of a solution, increases the amount of solute that can be dissolved • Decreasing the temperature of a solution, causes the solute to recrystallize Learning Check 1. How many grams of NaCl will dissolve in 100 g of H2O at 90°C? 2. 50 g of KCl is dissolved in 100 g of water at 50°C. Is the solution saturated, unsaturated or supersaturated? Effect of Pressure on Solubility • Pressure has a major effect on the solubility of gasliquid systems • An increase in pressure increases the solubility of a gas in the liquid “Like dissolves like” – a solvent usually dissolves solutes that have polarities similar to itself • • • Polar molecules dissolve other polar molecules and ionic compounds. and alcohols Nonpolar molecules dissolve other nonpolar molecules. and alcohols Alcohols, which have characteristics of both polar & nonpolar, tend to dissolve in both types of solvents, but will not dissolve ionic solids. and other alcohols Alcohols are organic, covalent molecules with an –OH group. Alcohol names end with “-ol.” SOLUTES NaCl ionic I2 non polar C3H7OH alcohol benzene (nonpolar) Br2 non polar KNO3 ionic toluene (polar) Ca(OH)2 ionic methanol alcohol NH3 polar CO2 non polar SOLVENTS Water polar CCl4non polar Alcohol alcohol Colligative properties Colligative properties - the physical changes that result from adding solute to a solvent. Colligative Properties depend on how many solute particles are present as well as the solvent amount, but they do NOT depend on the type of solute particles. • • • • • Boiling Point Elevation Freezing Point Depression Osmotic Pressure Increasing Vapor Pressure Lowering Conductivity Increasing More particles/ions = greater change Learning Check 1. Which substance will provide the greatest change in freezing point of water? A. NaCl B. CaCl2 C. C6H12O6 D. H2O 2 ions 3 ions 1 particle no change in H2O 2. Which of the following reflect colligative properties? (I) A 0.5 m NaBr solution has a higher vapor pressure than a 0.5 m BaCl2 3 ions 2 ions solution. = vapor pressure lowering (more ions lower pressure) (II) A 0.5 m NaOH solution freezes at a lower temperature than pure water 2 ions 0 ions = freezing point depression (III) Pure water freezes at a higher temperature than pure methanol. Freezing point is a physical property, not a colligative property A. only I B. only II C. only III D. I and II E. I and III 3. A student measured the conductivity in water, of unlabeled liquids, after each added drop. The following graph was produced... a. Identify the line that represents: aluminum chloride AlCl3, 4 ions water H2O, no change in H2O magnesium chloride MgCl2, 3 ions sugar C6H12O6, 1 particle sodium chloride NaCl, 2 ions b. Which line could also represent potassium iodide? AlCl3 MgCl2 Conductivity (µs/cm) – – – – – NaCl C6H12O6 H2O KI, 2 ions = same as NaCl # of Drops Solution Composition - Mass Percent Mass percent – describes a solution’s composition expresses the mass of solute present in a given mass of solution Mass Percent = mass of solute x 100% mass of solution* * mass of solution = mass of solute + mass of solvent Example – A solution is prepared by mixing 1.00g of C2H5OH, with 100.0g of H2O. Calculate the mass percent of ethanol. Given Mass Percent = mass of solute x 100% mass of solution mass of solute = 1.00 g mass of solution = 100.0 g + 1.00 g = 101.0 g Mass % = 1.00 g x 100 % 101.0 g Mass % = 0.990 % Solution Composition – Molarity Molarity – measure of concentration - number of moles of solute per volume of solution in liters Molarity = moles of solute = mol = M L of solution L Example – Calculate the molarity of a solution prepared by dissolving 11.5 g NaOH in enough water to make 1.50L solution. 1 mol NaOH x __________ 1 11.5 g NaOH x ___________ = 40.00 g NaOH 1.50 L NaOH 0.192 M Ex: Calculate the mass of solid AgCl formed when 1.50L of a 0.100M AgNO3 solution is reacted with excess NaCl. NaCl + AgNO3 AgCl + NaNO3 1.50 L ?g 0.100 M 0.100 mol AgNO3 x ____________ 1 mol AgCl x143.32 g AgCl = 1.50 L AgNO3 x ______________ ____________ L AgNO3 1 1 mol AgNO3 1 mol AgCl 21.5 g Example – How many moles of Ag+ ions are present in 25mL of a 0.75M Ag2SO4 solution? Ag2SO4 2 Ag+1 + SO4-2 1 L Ag2SO4 0.75 mol Ag2SO4 x ______________ 2 mol Ag+1 25 mL Ag2SO4 x _____________ x ______________ = 1000 mL Ag2SO4 1 L Ag2SO4 1 mol Ag2SO4 0.038 mol Ag+1 Learning check Calculate the molarity of a solution prepared by dissolving 25.6 g NaC2H3O2 in enough water to make 200.0 mL solution. Standard Solution • Standard Solution – a solution whose concentration is accurately known Example – A chemist needs 1.0 L of a 0.200M K2Cr2O7 solution. How much solid K2Cr2O7 must be weighed out to make this solution? 1.0 L K2Cr2O7 x ________________ 0.200 mol K2Cr2O7 1 L K2Cr2O7 g K2Cr2O7 x 294.20 ______________ = 1 mol K2Cr2O7 59 g K2Cr2O7 Dilution Dilution – process of adding more solvent to a solution Moles of solute before dilution = Moles of solute after dilution M1V1 = M2V2 Example: What volume of 16M H2SO4 must be used to prepare 1.5L of a 0.10M H2SO4 solution? Given V1 = ? M1 = 16 M V1 = _____ M2V2 M1 V1 = (0.10 M)(1.5 L) ____________ 16 M V2 = 1.5 L M2 = 0.10 M V1 = 0.0094 L Learning Check Example: Prepare 500.0mL of 1.00 M HC2H3O2 from a 17.5 M stock solution. What volume of the stock solution is required? Given V1 = 500.0 mL M1 = 1.00 M V2 = _____ M1V1 M2 V2 = (1.00 M)(500.0 mL) _______________ 17.5 M M2 = 17.5 M V2 = ? V2 = 28.6 mL NotesAcids and Bases Acids and Bases Arrhenius ACIDS – produces hydrogen ions in aqueous solutions, sour taste, low pH, and the fact that they turn litmus paper red HCl (aq) H+ (aq) + Cl- (aq) Arrhenius BASES – produces hydroxide ions in aqueous solutions, bitter taste, slippery feel, high pH, and the fact that they turn litmus paper blue NaOH (aq) Na+ (aq) + OH- (aq) Arrhenius definition – limits the concept of a base Bronsted – Lowry definition – gives a broader definition of a base Bronsted – Lowry ACID – a proton (H+) donor Bronsted – Lowry BASE – a proton (H+) acceptor General Reaction – proton donor HA (aq) + H2O (l) H3O+ (aq) + A- (aq) Acid Base Conjugate Conjugate Acid Base proton acceptor Conjugate Base – everything that remains of the acid molecule after a proton is lost Conjugate Acid – the base with the transferred proton (H+) Conjugate Acid – Base Pair – two substances related to each other by the donating and accepting of a single proton Examples: Finish each equation and identify each member of the conjugate acid –base pair. H2SO4 (aq) + H2O (l) Acid Base HSO4-1(aq) + H3O+ (aq) Conjugate Base Conjugate Acid CO32- (aq) + H2O (l) HCO3-1(aq) + OH- (aq) Base Conjugate Acid Acid Conjugate Base The hydronium ion, H3O+, forms when water behaves as a base. This happens when the two unshared pairs of electrons on O bond covalently with the H+. Learning check Write the conjugate ACID a. NH3 b. HCO3-1 Write the conjugate BASE a. H3PO4 b. HBr Finish each equation and identify each member of the conjugate acid –base pair. a. H2SO3 (aq) + H2O (l) b. SO4-2 (aq) + H2O (l) Water as an Acid and a Base Amphoteric – a substance that can behave as either an acid or a base - water is the most common amphoteric substance Ionization of Water – H2O (l) + H2O (l) H3O+ (aq) + OH- (aq) In the shorthand form: H2O (l) H+ (aq) + OH- (aq) Ion-product constant – Kw refers to the ionization of water [ ] = concentration Kw = [H+][OH-] [H+] = hydrogen ion concentration in M [OH-] = hydroxide ion concentration in M At 25C, Kw = [H+][OH-] = [1.0 x 10-7] [1.0 x 10-7] = 1.0 x 10-14 If [H+] increases, the [OH-] decreases, so the products of the two is still 1.0 x 10-14. There are three possible situations – 1. A neutral solution, where [H+] = [OH-] 2. An acidic solution, where [H+] [OH-] 3. A basic solution, where [H+] [OH-] Example: Calculate [H+] or [OH-] as required for each of the following solutions at 25C, for each solution state whether it is neutral, acidic, or basic. a. 1.0 x 10-5 M OHKw = [H+][OH-] 1 x 10-14 = [H+][1.0 x 10-5 M] [H+] = 1.0 x 10-9 M BASIC b. 10.0 M H+ Kw = [H+][OH-] 1 x 10-14 = [10.0 M][OH-] [OH-] = 1.00 x 10-15 M ACIDIC pH scale pH scale – because the [H+] in an aqueous solution is typically small, logarithms are used to express solution acidity pH = -log [H+] Graphing calculator 1. Press the +/- key 2. Press the log key 3. Enter the [H+] pOH = -log [OH-] Non graphing calculator 1. Enter the [H+] 2. Press the log key 3. Press the +/- key Significant Figure Rule – The number of places to the right of the decimal for a log must be equal to the number of significant figures in the original number. pH Scale Example – Calculate the pH or pOH a. [H+] = 5.9 x 10-9 M pH = - log [H+] pH = - log (5.9 x 10-9 M) pH = 8.23 b. [OH-] = 2.4 x 10-6 M pOH = - log [OH-] pOH = - log (2.4 x 10-6 M) pOH = 5.62 Since Kw = [H+][OH-] = 1.0 x 10-14 , pH + pOH = 14.00 Example - The pH of blood is about 7.4. What is the pOH of blood? pH + pOH =14.00 7.4 + pOH = 14.00 pOH = 6.6 In order to calculate the concentration from the pH or pOH, [H+] = 10-pH Graphing calculator 1. Press the 2nd function, then log 2. Press the +/- key 3. Enter the pH [OH-] = 10-pOH Non-graphing calculator 1. Enter the pH 2. Press the +/- key 3. Press the inverse log key Example - The pH of a human blood sample was measured to be 7.41. What is the [H+] in blood? [H+] = 10-pH [H+] = 10-7.41 [H+] = 3.9 x 10-8 M Example – The pOH of the water in a fish tank is found to be 6.59. What is the [H+] for this water? [OH-] = 10-pOH [OH-] = 10-6.59 [OH-] = 2.6 x 10-7 M Kw = [H+][OH-] 1 x 10-14 = [H+][2.6 x 10-7 M] [H+] = 3.8 x 10-8 M Learning check • Determine the pH of a solution with a hydrogen ion concentration of 3.2 x10-12 M. • What is the [OH-] concentration of a solution with a hydrogen ion concentration of 8.9x10-4M? • What is the pH of a solution with a hydroxide ion concentration of 5.7x10-10 M? How Do We Measure pH? • For less accurate measurements, one can use – Litmus paper • “Red” paper turns blue above ~pH = 8 • “Blue” paper turns red below ~pH = 5 – An indicator How Do We Measure pH? For more accurate measurements, one uses a pH meter, which measures the voltage in the solution. Strong Acids • seven strong acids are HCl, HBr, HI, HNO3, H2SO4, HClO3, and HClO4. • These are, by definition, strong electrolytes and exist totally as ions in aqueous solution. Strong Bases • Strong bases are the soluble hydroxides, which are the alkali metal and heavier alkaline earth metal hydroxides (Ca2+, Sr2+, and Ba2+). • Again, these substances dissociate completely in aqueous solution, strong electrolytes Strong, Weak, or Nonelectrolyte • • • • Electrolytes are substances which, when dissolved in water, break up into cations (plus-charged ions) and anions (minus-charged ions). We say they ionize. Strong electrolytes ionize completely (100%), while weak electrolytes ionize only partially (usually on the order of 1–10%). The ions in an electrolyte can be used to complete an electric circuit and power a bulb. Strong electrolytes fall into three categories: strong acids, strong bases, and soluble salts. The weak electrolytes include weak acids, weak bases and insoluble salts. Molecules are nonelectrolytes. Substance Classification - Strong acid, weak acid, strong base, weak base, soluble salt, insoluble salt, molecule Strong electrolyte, weak electrolyte, nonelectrolyte sodium hydroxide strong base acetic acid weak acid weak electrolyte potassium nitrate soluble salt strong electrolyte hydrobromic acid strong acid strong electrolyte silver chloride insoluble salt weak electrolyte Carbon dioxide molecule nonelectrolyte strong electrolyte Learning check Substance chloric acid barium carbonate nitric acid sulfurous acid strontium sulfate ethanol octane (gasoline) Classification - Strong Strong electrolyte, acid, weak acid, strong weak electrolyte, base, weak base, soluble nonelectrolyte salt, insoluble salt, molecule Titration A known concentration of base (or acid) is slowly added to a solution of acid (or base). Titration A pH meter or indicators are used to determine when the solution has reached the equivalence point, at which the stoichiometric amount of acid equals that of base. Titration of a Strong Acid with a Strong Base From the start of the titration to near the equivalence point, the pH goes up slowly. Titration of a Strong Acid with a Strong Base Just before and after the equivalence point, the pH increases rapidly. Titration of a Strong Acid with a Strong Base At the equivalence point, moles acid = moles base, and the solution contains only water and the salt from the cation of the base and the anion of the acid. Titration of a Strong Acid with a Strong Base As more base is added, the increase in pH again levels off. Neutralization Neutralization Reaction = Acid + Base Salt + Water Salt – ionic compound containing a positive ion other than H+ and a negative ion other than OH- Buffered solutions – resists a change in its pH even when a strong acid or base is added to it - A solution is buffered in the presence of a weak acid and its conjugate base pH and pOH Calculations + H [OH-] = 1 x 10-14 [H+] - OH pH pOH = 14 - pH pH = 14 - pOH pOH = -log[OH -] [OH-] = 10 -pOH pH = -log[H +] [H+] = 10 -pH [H+] = 1 x 10-14 [OH-] pOH