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Name:______KEY_____________________ Date: ______________ Period: ______ Standard 6a: Students know the definitions of solute and solvent. Match the following: 1. The chemical that is doing the dissolving (there is more of it) in the solution. b a. Solute 2. The chemical that is being dissolved (there is less of it too) in the solution. a b. Solvent 3. The ability of one chemical to dissolve into another. f c. Miscible 4. An adjective used to describe 2 liquids that are able to dissolve into each other.c d. Solution 5. A weak solution with very little solute in it – unsaturated.i e. Homogenous mixture 6. A strong solution with a lot of solute in it – saturated. j 7. A solution that has less solute that can be dissolved into it.h f. 8. A solution that has as much solute dissolved in it as it can. g g. Saturated 9. A homogenous mixture.d h. Unsaturated 10. A combination in which all components are evenly distributed and has a uniform i. Dilute j. Concentrate appearance. e Solubility 2. Which of the substances in the table can act as either the solute or the solvent when mixed with 100 grams of water at 20 °C? 3. A teaspoon of dry coffee crystals dissolves when mixed in a cup of hot water. This process produces a coffee solution. The original crystals are classified as a A solute. B solvent. C reactant. D product. Standard 6b: Students know how to describe the dissolving process at the molecular level by using the concept of random molecular motion. 1. What are the steps that a solute must go through in order to be dissolved? The solvent molecules attract and separate the solute molecules or ions (breaks down IMFs) 2. What is the universal solvent? water 3. What are the differences between a polar, a non-polar, and an ionic molecule? Polar = covalent but + and – end non-polar = covalent, but no charged ends ionic = cation and anion 4. How can you predict if a solute will dissolve in a solvent? Polar dissolve polar nonpolar dissolves nonpolar 5. Will KBr dissolve in CH3F? Explain your answer. Yes because KBr is ionic (polar) and CH3F is polar covalent 6. Will NaCl dissolve in CCl4? Explain your answer. No because NaCl is ionic (polar) and CCl4 is nonpolar covalent 7. If the attractive forces among solid particles are less than the attractive forces between the solid and a liquid, the solid will A probably form a new precipitate as its crystal lattice is broken and re-formed. B be unaffected because attractive forces within the crystal lattice are too strong for the dissolution to occur. C begin the process of melting to form a liquid. D dissolve as particles are pulled away from the crystal lattice by the liquid molecules. 8. Water is a polar solvent, while hexane is a nonpolar solvent. . Which of the examples illustrates a non-polar solute in a polar solvent? (std 6b) B Standard 6c: Students know temperature, pressure, and surface area affect the dissolving process. 1. How does each of the following affect the solubility? a. Increasing the surface area d. Stirring or shaking increases it Increases it b. Increasing the pressure of a gas increases it e. Increasing the temp of a solid/liquid increases it c. Decreasing the surface area decreases it f. Increasing the temp of a gas decreases it 2. Use the solubility curve to answer the following questions. Solubility Curve 240 220 Solubility (g solute/100g water) 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Temperature (degrees C) NaClO3 KBr KNO3 NaCl CO2 a. Which chemical has the greatest solubility at 80°C? NaClO3 b. How many grams of NaClO3 will dissolve in 100 g of water at 60 °C? about 150-155 c. How many grams of NaClO3 will dissolve in 400g of water at 20°C? 400g in 400g of water d. Which molecule is a gas? How do you know? X or CO2 since curve goes down e. How many more grams of KNO3 will dissolve if I raise the temperature from 40 to 80°C? 100g more 3. A technician prepared a solution by heating 100 milliliters of distilled water while adding KCl crystals until no more KCl would dissolve. She then capped the clear solution and set it aside on the lab bench. After several hours she noticed the solution had become cloudy and some solid had settled to the bottom of the flask. Which statement best describes what happened? A As the solution cooled, evaporation of water increased the KCl concentration beyond its solubility. B Water molecules, trapped with the KCl crystals, were released after heating. C At lower temperatures the solubility of the KCl decreased and recrystallization occurred. D At increased temperatures the solubility of KCl increased and remained too high after cooling. Standard 6d: Students know how to calculate the concentration of a solute in terms of grams per liter, molarity, parts per million, and percent composition. 1. What are the formulas for each of the following? a. % by volume: c. Molarity Liters of solute/liters of solution x 100% Molarity = moles/liters b. % by mass: d. ppm grams of solute/grams of solution x 100% grams of solute/grams of solvent x 1 000 000 2. What is the molarity of a solution made with 45 g of KNO3 and 0.5L of water? M = moles/L 1) covert grams of KNO3 into moles using molar mass then plug into formula Final answer = 0.89 M 3. Children’s toothpaste has 0.7% fluorine by volume. If I purchase a 500 mL of toothpaste, how much of it is fluoride? 0.7 = y / 500 x 100% solve for y final answer = 3.5 mL 4. Coca-cola contains 39 g of sugar in every 334g can. What is the percentage of sugar? 39/334 x 100% = 12% 5. By law, tap water needs to have between 0.7 and 1.3ppm of fluoride in it. If the sample Julia tested contained 9 particles of fluorine out of every 10 million particles in solution, is the sample within legal limits? Explain. 9/ 10,000,000 x 1 000 000 = 0.9 ppm 6. What is the density of a 45g sample of NaF in 2L of water? (density = g/L) 45/2 = 22.5 g/L 7. If the solubility of NaCl at 25 ºC is 36.2 g/100 g H2O, what mass of NaCl can be dissolved in 50.0 g of H2O? A 18.1 g B 36.2 g C 72.4 g D 86.2 g 8. How many moles of HNO3 are needed to prepare 5.0 liters of a 2.0 M solution of HNO3? A 2.5 B5 C 10 D 20 9. The Dead Sea is the saltiest sea in the world. It contains 332 grams of salt per 1000 grams of water. What is the concentration in parts per million (ppm)? A 0.332 ppm B 332 ppm C 33,200 ppm D 332,000 ppm