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Southpointe Academy AP Chemistry Solids, Liquids and Solutions Phase Changes Melting Freezing Vaporization Condensation Sublimation Deposition – Vaporization and Vapor Pressure - Evaporation = Vaporization - Molecules vaporize because they have enough energy to overcome the intermolecular forces between themselves and neighbouring molecules. - As the more energetic molecules vaporize, the average kinetic energy of the remaining molecules decreases. - Consequently, the temperature of the liquid decreases. - When a liquid vapourizes on your hand, your hand feels cold. 1 Enthalpy (Heat) of Vaporization To maintain a constant temperature when it vaporizes, a liquid must absorb heat to replace the kinetic energy carried away by the vaporizing molecules. The Enthalpy of Vaporization is the quantity of heat that must be absorbed to vaporize a given amount of liquid at a constant temperature. For water: H 2O(l ) H 2O( g ) H vapn 44.0kJ / mol This means it takes 44.0kJ to vaporize 1 mol of water Condensation is the opposite of vaporization. For water: H condn 44.0kJ / mol Overall: H vapn H condn 0 Example: How much heat in kilojoules is required to vaporize 125g of methanol at 25ºC if H vapn 38.0kJ / mol for methanol? 2 Vapor Pressure When we place a liquid in an open container, eventually all the liquid will escape into the gaseous state and become dispersed in the atmosphere. When we place a liquid in a closed container, the system reaches a dynamic equilibrium. The rate of vapourization and condensation are equal. Liquid Gas The Vapour Pressure of a liquid is the partial pressure exerted by its vapor in dynamic equilibrium with liquid at a constant temperature. The Vapour Pressure of a liquid increases with temperature. At a higher temperature more molecules have enough kinetic energy to escape from the liquid state. At higher temperature both the rate of vapourization and condensation are increased (but still equal). Example: What is the vapor pressure of hexane in atmospheres at 298.15 K if the density of the vapour is 0.701g/L? 3 Example: How much heat in kilojoules is required to convert 85.2g of water from liquid at 250C to vapour at 470C? Note: For water DH vapn = 44.0kJ / mol Specific Heat = 4.180J.g-1.0 C -1 4 Example: An ice cube with a mass of 25.5g at a temperature of 0.0 0C is added to 125mL of water at 26.50C in an insulated container. What is the final temperature of the water after the ice has melted? 5 Generally: If the intermolecular forces within a liquid are weak, many molecules escape from the surface. The vapour pressure is high and the liquid is volatile. If the intermolecular forces within a liquid are strong, few molecules escape from the surface. The vapour pressure is low and the liquid is not volatile. Boiling Point The Boiling Point of a liquid is the temperature at which its vapour pressure becomes equal to the atmospheric pressure. Once boiling begins, the temperature of the liquid cannot rise above the boiling point. The energy provided by the heating goes into converting liquid to vapor, not into raising the temperature. The Normal Boiling Point of a liquid is its boiling point at 1 atm.. Critical Temperature and Pressure The critical temperature Tc is the highest temperature at which a liquid and vapour can co-exist in equilibrium. The vapour pressure at this temperature is called the critical pressure Pc . The condition corresponding to a temperature of Tc and pressure of Pc is called the critical point. Alternatively, the critical temperature is the highest temperature at which a gas can be condensed into a liquid solely by increasing the pressure of the gas. 6 Melting, Melting Point and Heat of Fusion The conversion of a solid to a liquid is called melting or fusion. The quantity of heat required to melt a given amount of solid is called the Enthalpy (Heat) of Fusion ( H fusion ). Melting is an endothermic process: H 2O(s) H 2O(l ) H 6.01kJ / mol Freezing is an exothermic process: H 2O(l ) H 2O(s) H 6.01kJ / mol Sublimation The passage of molecules directly from the solid state to the vapour state is called sublimation. The reverse process is called deposition. A dynamic equilibrium is reached when the rates of sublimation and deposition become equal. Like vapour in equilibrium with a liquid, vapour in equilibrium with a solid exerts a pressure, often called a sublimation pressure. A plot of vapour pressure of a solid versus temperature is called a sublimation curve. The Triple Point The triple point is the only temperature at which the three states of matter can co-exist at equilibrium. It is the point where the vapour pressure curve of a substance and its sublimation curve meet. 7 Phase Diagrams A phase diagram is a graphical representation of the conditions of temperature and pressure under which a substance exists as a solid liquid or gas. Consider the following Phase Diagram: Point A – Curve AD – Curve AB – Curve AC – Point C – 8 Intermolecular Forces Dispersion Forces (London Forces) - Found in all substances Caused by random movement of electrons Increase in strength with increasing molecular size Increase in strength with increasing molecular elongation example: Octane (Elongated) Iso-octane (Compact) Dipole- Dipole Forces - Found in Polar Substances The more polar the substance, the greater the dipole moment, the greater the intermolecular force Intermolecular forces are USUALLY stronger in polar molecules 9 Hydrogen Bonds - Occur in polar molecules where H is bonded to N, O or F Water a good example: - each water molecule is bonded to four other water molecules Hydrogen bonding is the reason ice is less dense than water 10 Surface Tension - Molecules within the bulk of a liquid are attracted more strongly to neighbouring molecules than are surface molecules - It takes energy to increase the surface area of a liquid - Surface Tension is the amount of energy required to extend the surface of a liquid - Surface Tension decreases with increase in temperature - Why does water have a greater Surface Tension than hexane? - Surface tension allows insects to “walk on water”. (Their weight is not large enough to break the surface of the water) 11 Adhesive Forces: Intermolecular forces between unlike molecules Cohesive Forces: Intermolecular forces between like molecules If the adhesive forces between a liquid and a surface are greater than the cohesive forces within a liquid, the liquid will wet the surface Examples: Glass is wet by water: Glass coated with an oil film is not wet by water: The meniscus of water and mercury in a glass tube: Viscosity The Viscosity of a liquid is a measure of its resistance to flow Honey has a high viscosity Water has a low viscosity The viscosity of a liquid is related to the strength of intermolecular forces Viscosity decreases with increase in temperature 12 Network Covalent Solids Diamond Structure: Properties: Graphite Structure: Properties: 13 Solutions Solute: Solvent: Problems (1) Find the percent by mass of NaCl in a solution made by dissolving 124g NaCl in 768g of water. (2) Find the percent by volume of ethanol in a solution made by mixing 45.0mL of ethanol with 85.0mL of water. 14 Molarity Versus Molality The Molarity (mol/L) of a solution varies with temperature, because the volume of a solution increases with increasing temperature. The Molality is another unit of concentration that is independent of temperature: Amount of solute (mol) Molality (m) = ______________________ Mass of solvent (kg) Example: What is the molality of a solution prepared by dissolving 5.05g of C10 H 8 ( s) in 75.0mL of Benzene ( C6 H 6 ), which has a density = 0.879 g/mL? 15 Mole Fraction and Mole Percent Consider the following example: A solution is made by mixing 4 mol methanol and 6 mol of ethanol. The mole fractions are as follows: xCH 3OH =4/(4+6) = 0.40 xCH 3CH 2OH =6/(4+6) = 0.60 The mole percents are as follows: 40 mol% methanol 60 mol% ethanol Solution Formation Why do some substances dissolve in a given solvent and others do not? To answer this question, we need to consider two things, the enthalpy of solution and intermolecular forces. Enthalpy of Solution Consider the steps required to obtain a solution: 1) Pure Solvent Separated solvent molecules 2) Pure Solute Separated solute molecules 3) Separated solvent and solute molecules Solution Net: Pure Solvent + Pure Solute Solution H1 H 2 H 3 (>0) (>0) (<0) H solution H 1 H 2 H 3 If H solution < 0, it is likely a solute will dissolve in a solvent. Generally if the forces between solute and solvent particles are stronger than the forces between the solvent particles and the solute particles, the solute will dissolve in the solvent. 16 Aqueous Solutions of Ionic Compounds The forces that cause an ionic substance to dissolve in water are ion-dipole forces, the attraction between water dipoles, and cations and anions. The extent to which an ionic solid dissolves in water is determined largely by the strength of these forces compared to the strength of the ion-ion attractions in the ionic solid. It can be difficult to predict the solubility of a particular ionic compound. We can refer to a solubility table. Saturated Solutions Saturated Solutions reach a dynamic equilibrium. Example: NaCl(s) Na (aq) Cl (aq) The rate of dissolving equals the rate of crystallizing. Solubility as a Function of Temperature Solubility varies with temperature. For 95% of all ionic compounds, solubility increases significantly with temperature. (Sulfates and Acetates can be an exception). 17 The Solubility of Gases Gases are somewhat soluble in water Examples: Carbon Dioxide in Coke Air in lakes so fish can breathe The solubility of a gas in a liquid depends on both temperature and pressure. Temperature Most gases become less soluble in liquids as temperature increases. Pressure At constant temperature, the solubility of a gas is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas. The greater the pressure of the gas the greater the solubility. 18 Vapour Pressure of Solutions Raoult found that the presence of a solute lowers the vapor pressure of the solvent in a solution. Raoult’s Law: The vapour pressure of the solvent above a solution ( Psolv ) is the product of the vapour pressure of the pure solvent ( P 0 solv ) and the mole fraction of the solvent in solution ( x solv ). Psolv x solv P 0 solv (Textbook) OR PA X A PT (Exam Formula Sheet) Raoult’s Law is only strictly followed by ideal solutions. It also works for non-ideal solutions that are very dilute. If molecules A and B are in a solution and are almost identical chemically, then the solution will be ideal. Since the interaction energies between A and B are the same, it follows that there is no overall energy change when the substances are mixed. Examples: A solution of 1-butanol and 2-butanol will be ideal and will obey Raoult’s Law. A solution of water and octane will not be ideal and will not obey Raoult’s Law. Problem: The vapour pressure of pure water at 20ºC is 17.5mmHg. What is the vapour pressure if a solution has 1.50mol of sucrose (C12 H 22O11 ) dissolved per kilogram of water? 19 Freezing Point Depression and Boiling Point Elevation In this section, we will focus on solutions where the solvent is volatile and the solute is non-volatile and a non-electrolyte. We know that the presence of such a solute lowers the vapour pressure of a solvent in a solution because the mole fraction of the solvent is reduced. The presence of such a solute also lowers the freezing point of the solvent and raises the boiling point of the solvent. Generally: T f T f ( solution ) T f ( solvent ) K f m Tb Tb (solution ) Tb (solvent ) K b m Where: T f - freezing point depression (change in freezing point) Tb - boiling point elevation (change in boiling point) K f , K b - constants m- molality (mol solute/kg solvent) Generally, only the solvent freezes, and only the solvent escapes as vapour during boiling. As a result, the concentration of the solute increases as freezing or boiling occurs, causing the freezing point to drop still more, and the boiling point to rise higher. Note for water: K f =1.86 0 Cm 1 K b =0.512 0 Cm 1 (you do not need to remember these constants) 20 Example: What is the freezing point of an aqueous sucrose solution that has 25.0g of sucrose per 100.0g of water? 21 Example: An aqueous solution of sorbitol contains 1.00 g of sorbitol in 100.0 g of water. It has a freezing point of -0.102 degrees celcius. The sorbitol contains 39.56% C, 7.75% H and 52.7% O by mass. What are the molar mass and molecular formula of sorbitol? Freezing point depression and boiling point elevation of non-volatile solutions have practical applications such as radiator coolant (ethyl glycol in water) in cars. 22 Osmotic Pressure Filter paper is permeable to water, but impermeable to coffee grounds. There are some materials that are semi-permeable, they allow solvent molecules to pass but not solute molecules. These materials are called semi-permeable membranes. Osmosis is the net flow of solvent molecules through semi-permeable membrane from a solution of lower concentration to a solution of higher concentration. The pressure required to stop osmosis is called osmotic pressure. For dilute solutions: Osmotic Pressure ( ) n RT V = Osmotic Pressure (atm) V = Volume (L) R = Gas Constant T = Temperature (K) 23 Example: 1.50g of hemocyanin is dissolved in 0.250L of water. The solution has an Osmotic Pressure of 0.00342 atm at 277 K. What is the molar mass of hemocyanin? What is the freezing point of the solution? 24 Solutions of Electrolytes So far, we have looked at solutions that contain non-electrolytes. We know, however, that electrolytes can also impact the boiling and freezing point of solutions. Consider NaCl and CaCl2 . Both of these substances are strong electrolytes, they dissociate relatively easily in water. As long as the concentration of a solution is low, 1 mole of NaCl forms 2 moles of ions while 1 mole of CaCl2 forms 3 moles of ions. We can use the van’t Hoff factor (i) to find the freezing point depression and boiling point elevation. For a dilute solution of NaCl , i=2. (in theory) For a dilute solution of CaCl2 , i=3. (in theory) We can modify our equations: T f iK f m Tb iK b m Compared to NaCl , a solution of CaCl2 should have more ions in solution for the same concentration. This should lead to increased freezing point depression and boiling point elevation. Hence CaCl2 works better for de-icing roads than NaCl . Note that if we are considering a weaker electrolyte (example: CH 3COOH ) or a somewhat concentrated solution (more than 0.01M), i values tend to be considerably lower than might be expected. Examples: 0.01M CH 3COOH , i=1.04 (might expect i=2) 0.01M NaCl , i=1.94 (might expect i=2) 25